
It entered the lexicon not just because it suggests something old, but because of a specific set of 19th century laws regulating voting.

Old power plants are sometimes grandfathered from having to meet new clean air requirements.īut like so many things, the term "grandfather," used in this way, has its roots in America's racial history. The troubled website reassures consumers that they can stay enrolled in grandfathered insurance plans that existed before the Affordable Care Act was enacted in 2010.

It's an easy way to describe individuals or companies who get to keep operating under an existing set of expectations when new rules are put in place. The term "grandfathered" has become part of the language. People aren't exempted from new regulations because they're old and crotchety, even if that's what it sounds like when we say they're "grandfathered in." This editorial cartoon from a January 1879 edition of Harper's Weekly pokes fun at the use of literacy tests for blacks as voting qualifications.
