Their disenfranchisement fueled the flames of the brewing anti-U.S. insurgency.
From the time.com
This results in feelings of disenfranchisement and to abstentionism among voters.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Do you support the disenfranchisement of UK voters in favour of a European elite.
From the guardian.co.uk
I think voter disengagement is more of a problem than voter disenfranchisement.
From the economist.com
Increasing Sinhalese nationalism led to disenfranchisement of the Tamil minority.
From the en.wikipedia.org
One massive issue in India is the partial disenfranchisement of this urban youth.
From the world.time.com
The Venezuelan community in Florida is not accepting its disenfranchisement meekly.
From the economist.com
But with negligible levels of fraud, disenfranchisement is a greater concern.
From the economist.com
It's a fine line between government disenfranchisement and the self-inflicted kind.
From the time.com
More examples
The act of withdrawing certification or terminating a franchise
(disenfranchised) deprived of the rights of citizenship especially the right to vote; "labor was voiceless"; "disenfrenchised masses took to the streets"
(Disenfranchise) The withdrawal of the franchise by the Franchisor from the Franchisee. This is likely to occur when there have been persistent breaches of the Franchise Agreement by the Franchisee and such breaches have not been rectified.
(disenfranchised) deprived of legal rights or privileges
(DISENFRANCHISED) To be without the right to vote. More commonly the term is used to describe groups that have little power or representation in the political process. ...
Denial or deprivation of the right to vote.
Depriving someone of any rights they may have. For example, if a member of the 'widget' company fails to observe any rules, they may have some rights taken away from them.