What reform to voting procedures followed the Panic of 1819?
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Electors were decided by the popular vote of citizens
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Electors were decided by the popular vote of citizens is the right answer.
The Panic of 1819 was the earliest significant peacetime economic crisis in the United States. Some of the reforms took place in the voting procedures, for instance, an extended electorate installed a new two-party arrangement that eliminated the politics of reverence to and influence of the high culture. Another important reform was the abolition of property requirements for polling and duty holding. In 1826, the universal white majority vote was made tolerable by eliminating tax paying and army criteria. Polling by voice was also opposed. Because of these regulations, the number of votes rose above to nearly 80% white men.
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