14 Rights Women Have Gained Since Earning The Right To Vote

This is why #OurVoteCounts.
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Vote baby vote!
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With the 2016 presidential election right around the corner, it’s important to look back and remember how much it matters that women are engaged in the political process. 

On August 18, 1920 the 19th Amendment was ratified, which granted white women the right to vote. In some states, black women weren’t able to vote until the 1960s, due to voter registration restrictions put in place to deny voting rights to people of color. 

Since then, women have fought for our rights to obtain a safe and legal abortion, fight on the front lines and marry the people we love. Much of this progress was achieved by using our power to vote.

Women were instrumental in determining the outcome of the 2012 election ― and we’ll most likely do it again this November. There is a lot at stake for women this year and, thankfully, women have a say in who sits in our oval office for the next four years. We are 51 percent of the population so let’s vote like it. 

Below are 14 rights women have gained since earning the right to vote to celebrate the power of women’s voices, and remember that our vote counts this election year ― and every year after. 

1
1922: Gained The Right To Marry A Foreigner And Keep Their Citizenship
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In 1907 women who married foreign men would be stripped of their citizenship due to the Expatriation Act. No such penalty was given to men who married foreign women. Two years after women won the right to vote, in 1922, the Expatriation Act was repealed.
2
1960: Women Were Finally Able To Purchase The Birth Control Pill
Daily Herald Archive via Getty Images
The FDA didn’t approve the pill until 1960, allowing women in the U.S. to take advantage of increasing reproductive freedom.
3
1968: Gained The Right To Have Equal Access To Job Listings
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In 1968, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission ruled that the standard practice of separating job listings and help wanted ads by sex was unlawful.
4
1970: Gained The Right To Be Paid The Same As Men For The Same Work
Dick Darrell via Getty Images
In 1970, a U.S. Court of Appeals ruled in Schultz v. Wheaton Glass Co. that an employer owed women the same compensation as men for jobs that are “substantially equal” even if they are not “identical.” This prevented employers from giving women different titles than men in order to pay them less.
5
1973: Women Could Legally Get Abortions
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In 1973, the iconic Supreme Court decision in Roe v. Wade allowed women to legally and safely get abortions.
6
1974: Gained The Right To Get A Credit Card In Their Own Names
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In 1974, women finally gained the right to get a credit card in their own names with the passage of the Equal Credit Opportunity Act of 1974. The law made credit card companies issue cards to women without a husband’s signature, which gave more women power over their personal finances.
7
1978: Women Gained The Right To Work Without Discrimination Due To Pregnancy
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The Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978 made it illegal for employers to pass on otherwise qualified female applicants because of the assumption that they might become pregnant. Before this law, women were routinely let go after getting pregnant to spare employers health care and maternity leave costs. Under this law, it became illegal for a woman to be denied a job or promotion or be fired because she is (or may become) pregnant.
8
1985: Women Could Divorce Their Husbands Because Of "Irreconcilable Differences"
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Although California became the first state to allow for no-fault divorce in 1969, it wasn’t until 1985 that all states (except New York) allowed women to file for divorce without the requirement that the husband had committed any wrongdoing. Before “irreconcilable differences” was sufficient grounds for a split, women had to claim, and sometimes prove, that their spouse had mistreated, abandoned, abused or been unfaithful to them in order for the state to approve the separation.
9
1986: Women Could Finally Seek Damages For Sexual Harassment In The Workplace
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In 1986, the Supreme Court decision in Meritor Savings Bank v. Vinson determined that making repeated sexual references or advances in the workplace created a hostile work environment that amounted to discrimination on the basis of sex. Sexual harassment became a part of the national conversation in 1991 when Anita Hill accused Clarence Thomas of workplace harassment.
10
1993: Marital Rape Became A Criminal Offense In All 50 States
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Although Nebraska became the first state to make criminalize marital rape, it wasn’t until 1993 that all states eliminated the “spousal exemption” for rape. Unbelievably, marital rape is still not punished to the same degree as extra-marital rape in 26 states.
11
1998: Women Could Access The Morning After Pill
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12
2009: Women Could File A Complaint About Pay Discrimination
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Signed by President Obama in 2009, the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Restoration Act allows employees to file a complaint of pay discrimination within six months of receiving their last paycheck. The act confirmed that discrimination occurs every time a woman is paid less for equal work. Before 2009, the initial decision to pay a woman less was seen as the first and only discriminatory act -- one with a statute of limitations of six months.
13
2013: Women Were Allowed To Fight On The Front Lines
Tami Chappell / Reuters
In 2013, Defense Secretary Leon E. Panetta lifted the military ban on women in combat.
14
2015: Women Could Finally Marry Other Women
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Although Massachusetts became the first U.S. state to legalize same-sex marriage in 2004, it wasn’t until 2015 that same-sex marriage was legalized across the country.

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Before You Go

Historic Images Of Women Voting
(01 of29)
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In 1872, Susan B. Anthony registered and ultimately voted in a Rochester, New York election. When it was discovered that she had cast a vote as a woman, she was arrested for "voting illegally" and brought to trial. She was ordered to pay a $100 fine. She never did. (credit:National Women's History Museum)
(02 of29)
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Good luck telling this suffragette to ditch the vote and "go back on Tinder or Match.com." (credit:APA/Getty Images)
(03 of29)
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When life hands you stiff, uncomfortable apparel, make a pro-suffrage billboard. Emmeline Pankhurst, among the most famous voices in the English suffrage movement, advertises a march for women's suffrage in 1909. (credit:Museum of London/Heritage Images/Getty Image)
(04 of29)
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The National American Woman Suffrage Association parodies the scare tactics of anti-suffrage propaganda with the document "Why We Oppose Votes For Men." Reason #1: "Because men are too emotional to vote. Their conduct at baseball games and political conventions shows this." (credit:Learnnc.org)
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A suffragette stands with a "Votes For Women" banner in 1910. (credit:Topical Press Agency/Getty Images)
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You'd have to be pretty intent upon suppressing women to defy this simply logic. (via Imgur) (credit:Imgur)
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A satirical board game, produced by English suffragettes in 1910 depicts the struggles women were forced to confront. Players move through obstacles like demonstrations, arrests, hunger strikes, and force feeding to reach the House of Parliament at the center of the game -- a symbol for the right to vote. (credit:Museum of London/Heritage Images/Getty Images)
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Women assembling in San Francisco to to secure passage of a California state amendment granting women the right to vote. (credit:Underwood Archives/Getty Images)
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Produced by a suffrage group in London, this 1909 poster highlights the double standard applied to men and women, and just how senseless it was to withhold from women the right to vote. (credit:Museum of London/Heritage Images/Getty Images)
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Suffrage badass-in-chief Alice Paul leading celebration of Tennessee's ratification of the 19th Amendment looks a bit like the front row at a Beyonce concert. (credit:Stock Montage/Getty Images)
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A pro-suffrage postcard from 1913 is forceful and adorable. "For the work of a day; for the taxes we pay; for the laws we obey; want something to say." (credit:United States Library Of Congress)
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"At Last." So reads the cover of The Suffragist magazine in June, 1919, printed following the ratification of the 19th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, guaranteeing women the right to vote. (via Bryn Mawr College Library) (credit:Bryn Mawr College Library)
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In 1957, Colorado women evoked the early suffrage movement in protest of local political groups that still did not allow women to vote on committee issues. (credit:Al Moldvay/The Denver Post via Getty Images)
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Nuns arrive at a polling station in 1959. (credit:Keystone-France/Gamma-Keystone via Getty Images)
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African-American men were granted the right to vote by the 15th Amendment in 1870. But even after the 19th Amendment extended voting rights to African American women, discriminatory practices effectively disenfranchised many African-American voters. (credit:Afro American Newspapers/Gado/Getty Images)
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"Vote baby vote" (credit:Gabriel Hackett /Getty Images)
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In 1960, the Kennedy campaign produced a television ad of Jackie Kennedy speaking Spanish in an attempt to court Latino voters. It is widely recognized as the first time a national campaign recognized Hispanics as critical important bloc of the electorate. (credit:colettesaintyves.tumblr.com/)
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Women line up in Baltimore to vote in the 1964 election. The Civil Rights Act, which included greater protection for black voters, was passed three months later. (credit:Afro American Newspapers/Gado/Getty Images)
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Women Voters League Officials offer rides to voters in 1965. (credit:Duane Howell/The Denver Post via Getty Images)
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The Voting Rights Act of 1965 provided even greater protection to black voters against racial discrimination, but black women were advocating for important issues on the ballot long before that. (credit:ElizabethForMA on Flickr, under Creative Commons (CC BY-NC 2.0))
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A woman votes in style in 1970. (credit:Getty)
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Geraldine Ferraro, former candidate for vice president, votes in 1998. (credit:New York Daily News Archive via Getty Images)
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Hillary Clinton votes in the 2008 Democratic primary, for which she was a candidate for president. (credit:Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)
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Michelle Obama votes in 2010. (credit:M. Spencer Green)
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Gubernatorial candidate Wendy Davis votes in Texas on Oct. 20, the first day of early voting in that state. (credit:Max Faulkner/Fort Worth Star-Telegram/MCT via Getty Images)
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Two women walk past a voting sign at PS 3 on April 19, 2016 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. (credit:Stephanie Keith via Getty Images)
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A woman casts her vote during Missouri primary voting at Jury Elementary School on March 15, 2016 in Florissant, Missouri. / AFP / Michael B. Thomas (Photo credit should read MICHAEL B. THOMAS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:MICHAEL B. THOMAS via Getty Images)
(28 of29)
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A woman is checked in to receive her ballot during Missouri primary voting at the Griffith Elementary School on March 15, 2016 in Ferguson, Missouri.Voters began going to the polls Tuesday in five make-or-break presidential nominating contests, with Republican Donald Trump and Democrat Hillary Clinton seeking to tighten their grip as their party's front runners. / AFP / Michael B. Thomas (Photo credit should read MICHAEL B. THOMAS/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:MICHAEL B. THOMAS via Getty Images)
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A Sun Valley resident votes at the polling station located at Our Lady of The Holy Church on election day at the Sun Valley's Latino district, Los Angeles County, on November 6, 2012 in California. AFP PHOTO /JOE KLAMAR (Photo credit should read JOE KLAMAR/AFP/Getty Images) (credit:JOE KLAMAR via Getty Images)