WHO ALL WERE NOT ALLOWED TO CAST THEIR VOTE BEFORE INDEPENDENCE?
Answers
Answer:
Everyone except women...
Women's suffrage in India was a movement to fight for the right for women to gain political enfranchisement. They not only wanted suffrage but the right to stand for and hold office. In 1918, when Britain granted limited suffrage to women property holders, the law did not apply to British citizens in other parts of the Empire. Though both women and men presented petitions to the British commissions sent to evaluate Indian voting regulations, women's demands were ignored in the Montagu–Chelmsford Reforms. In 1919, impassioned pleas and reports indicating support for women to have the vote were presented by suffragists to the India Office and before the Joint Select Committee of the House of Lords and Commons, who were meeting to finalise the electoral regulation reforms of the Southborough Franchise Committee. Though they were not granted voting rights, nor the right to stand in elections, the Government of India Act 1919 allowed Provincial Councils to determine if women could vote, provided they met stringent property, income or educational levels.
Answer:
women and dalits
Explanation: