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Hatch Act of 1939 | |
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About 12 pages (3,495 words) in 2 products |
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Encyclopedia and Summary Information
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Hatch Act Summary
2,220 words, approx. 7 pages United States 1939 The 1939 Hatch Act places certain restrictions on executive and federal employees in regard to their participation in political activities. Certain employees of local and state government also fall under the restrictions that are...
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Hatch Act of 1939 Information
1,275 words, approx. 4 pages
 The Hatch Act of 1939 is a United States federal law whose main provision is to prohibit federal employees (civil servants) from engaging in partisan political activity. Named after Senator Carl Hatch of New Mexico, the law was officially known as An...


summary from source:
 The Washington Post
Revising the Hatch Act
10/04/1987: 562 words, approx. 2 pages Imagine watching a news conference of a candidate for mayor, Congress or president and later seeing the candidate in uniform putting mail in a box, processing a passport or Social Security claim, or auditing income tax! Although none of the above is likely...
summary from source:
 The Washington Post
The Hatch Act Hangs on
09/28/1988: 521 words, approx. 2 pages Legislation that would have allowed 2.8 million federal civil servants to enter the world of partisan political campaigning appears to be dead this year. If it flops, it will be the victim of a busy congressional calendar and the self-destruct seed that the...


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Hatch Act of 1939 | |
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About 12 pages (3,495 words) in 2 products |
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