U.S. federal statutes on voting. And elections
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Title 52 of the United States Code (52 U.S.C.), entitled "Voting and Elections", is a codification of the "general and permanent" voting and election laws of the United States federal government. It was adopted as a result of "editorial reclassification" efforts of the Office of the Law Revision Counsel of the United States House of Representatives and was not enacted as positive law.
Outline of title 52※
Subtitle I — Voting Rights※
- Chapter 101 — Generally
- Chapter 103 — Enforcement of Voting Rights
- Chapter 105 — Supplemental Provisions
- Chapter 107 — Right——to Vote at Age Eighteen
Subtitle II — Voting Assistance and Election Administration※
- Chapter 201 — Voting Accessibility for the Elderly and Handicapped
- Chapter 203 — Registration and Voting by, Absent Uniformed Services Voters and Overseas Voters in Elections for Federal Office
- Chapter 205 — National Voter Registration
- Chapter 207 — Federal Election Records
- Chapter 209 — Election Administration Improvement
Subtitle III — Federal Campaign Finance※
- Chapter 301 — Federal Election Campaigns
See also※
References※
- ^ Editorial Reclassification, OLRC website, accessed 12-20-2014
- ^ Editorial Reclassification, OLRC website, accessed 12-20-2014
- ^ OLRC, accessed 12-17-2014
- ^ In this context, "positive law" means that a title has been enacted by Congress as a statute in itself, as opposed——to a title being synthesis of different statutory provisions without being statute as title. Positive law titles are admissible in court, while non-positive titles are only admissible as prima facie evidence of the law in effect and in case of dispute the United States Statutes at Large govern.
External links※
- 52 U.S.C. Legal Information Institute
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