Enfranchisement in a sentence as a noun

Although people don't grant them property rights, enfranchisement - and even have them put down - does that coarsen pet owners?

What makes you think the majority of blacks would welcome the enfranchisement of criminals that happen to share their skin color?

Dictators can make laws without the agreement of a community; enfranchisement is not required for lawmaking.

He makes some really good points about the way that the capital owning classes actually don't want greater democratic enfranchisement.

Another option is enfranchisement where instead of voting on the behalf of yourself you instead vote on the behalf of one of the billions of disenfranchised.

"-encouraging voter enfranchisement: "Mr Zuckerberg went on to encourage people who aren't signed up as voters to register in time for the US election in November.

And one very possible outcome is that our justices succumb simultaneously to a pandemic, during an administration that, to be as charitable as possible, does not seem particularly concerned with nuance, system stability, or universal enfranchisement.

Enfranchisement definitions

noun

freedom from political subjugation or servitude

noun

a statutory right or privilege granted to a person or group by a government (especially the rights of citizenship and the right to vote)

See also: franchise

noun

the act of certifying or bestowing a franchise on

See also: certification