Illustrating of voting, for article on universal male suffrage

All of the world’s nations now guarantee universal suffrage

Note: This is an imagined future story, written as if a projected milestone has occurred. It is based on current trends and evidence, not confirmed events.

For the first time in recorded history, every recognized nation on Earth guarantees all of its adult citizens the right to vote — with no exceptions based on sex, race, religion, or economic status. The milestone, confirmed by independent electoral monitors in 2035 C.E., closes a 200-year arc that began when the first modern democracies extended suffrage to property-owning men alone and slowly, unevenly, expanded outward to include everyone.

It is a finish line that once seemed impossibly distant. As recently as the early 2020s C.E., several states still restricted voting on the basis of gender, citizenship hierarchy, or hereditary status. The final holdouts — a handful of Gulf states and one Pacific island nation — ratified constitutional amendments between 2031 C.E. and 2034 C.E., completing a global sweep that accelerated sharply after international economic pressure, youth-led protest movements, and a landmark 2029 C.E. United Nations resolution made electoral exclusion a formal human rights violation subject to trade consequences.

Key projections

  • Universal suffrage: All 195 U.N.-recognized member states now constitutionally guarantee the right to vote to every adult citizen regardless of sex, race, religion, or property ownership.
  • Voting rights timeline: The share of countries with full universal suffrage grew from roughly 60% in 1980 C.E. to over 90% by 2020 C.E., with the final 10% completing the transition between 2025 C.E. and 2034 C.E.
  • Democratic participation: Global average voter turnout rose to 71% in the 2033–2034 C.E. electoral cycle, up from 63% in the early 2010s C.E., according to projections from the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance.

How the final barriers fell

The trajectory tracked by Our World in Data’s suffrage dataset tells a story of uneven but persistent progress. Women’s suffrage, largely won across the democratic world between 1893 C.E. and 1971 C.E., was the first great wave. The second wave — dismantling racial and colonial restrictions — crested with the fall of apartheid-era voting laws in South Africa in 1994 C.E. and the extension of full voting rights to Indigenous peoples across the Americas through the early 2000s C.E.

The third wave was quieter but no less consequential. It targeted residual restrictions in states where women’s formal right to vote existed on paper but was undermined in practice — by male guardian requirements for registration, by geographic polling barriers in rural districts, or by de facto ethnic exclusions dressed up as administrative rules. Civil society organizations, many of them led by women in the affected communities, documented these gaps systematically and brought them before regional human rights courts.

The International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance credits three converging forces with accelerating the final push: the spread of mobile-based voter registration in low-infrastructure regions, a generational shift in political leadership in the Gulf, and sustained economic incentives tied to democratic governance benchmarks in bilateral trade agreements with the European Union and the United States.

What universal suffrage actually means

A legal guarantee is not the same as a fully functioning democracy. Researchers and electoral observers are quick to make that distinction.

Guaranteeing the right to vote does not guarantee free and fair elections, meaningful opposition, or protection from voter intimidation. The Freedom House global democracy index, which rates the quality of electoral systems rather than just their formal scope, still classifies 38 countries as “not free” in 2035 C.E. — meaning that while their citizens technically hold the right to vote, the conditions in which they do so fall short of international standards for genuine democratic participation.

This distinction matters. Universal suffrage is a necessary condition for democracy. It is not a sufficient one. The work of building institutions that make votes meaningful — independent courts, press freedom, campaign finance rules, protections for political opposition — remains unfinished in dozens of states that have now crossed the formal threshold.

The long road to here

One way to feel the scale of what has changed is to look at where the world stood just 100 years ago. In 1935 C.E., fewer than a third of the world’s nations extended the vote to women on equal terms with men. Most of Africa, Asia, and the Pacific remained under colonial rule, with voting rights controlled by foreign powers. The concept of a global standard for suffrage didn’t exist in any enforceable form.

The Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948 C.E. established the principle. The successive waves of decolonization across the 1950s, 1960s, and 1970s C.E. extended it to hundreds of millions of people. The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, ratified by most U.N. member states by the 1990s C.E., gave it teeth — at least on paper.

What 2035 C.E. adds is closure. Not perfection. Closure. The last formal legal exclusions are gone. Every adult on Earth now lives in a country that, at minimum, acknowledges their right to choose their government. This is one of many human rights milestones built across generations of advocacy, legislation, and sometimes sacrifice.

The unfinished agenda

Electoral observers and democracy researchers are united on what comes next: expanding suffrage was the easier half of the work. Several countries that completed their formal transition to universal suffrage in the last decade still score poorly on measures of electoral integrity — ballot secrecy, equal access to polling places, freedom from coercion at the polls.

Young voters remain underrepresented in parliaments almost everywhere, despite having secured the right to participate. And the question of whether voting rights should extend to non-citizen permanent residents — tens of millions of people who pay taxes and raise families in countries that still exclude them from the ballot — is becoming the next major fault line in the global conversation about political inclusion.

The 200-year project to extend the vote to every human being is complete. The older, harder project — making every vote count — is still underway.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Our World in Data — Suffrage

For more from Good News for Humankind, see:

About this article

  • 🤖 This article is AI-generated, based on a framework created by Peter Schulte.
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