- REPEAL
- Right-wing goal, vis-à-vis Obamacare
- Undo, as a law, unless a few senators defect and humiliate you
- Annul legally
- Undo, as an amendment
- Undo, in a way
- Invalidate, as a law
- Abrogate
- Take off the books
- Cancel, in a way
- Annul officially
- Declare null and void
- Overturn, as a decision
- Strike down, as legislation
- Cancel
- Revoke
- Nullify
- Formally withdraw
- Formally end
- Opposite of pass
- Undo legislatively
- Overturn
- Annul
- Prohibition ender
- 1933 headline
- Annul, as a law
- Cancel, as a law
- Strike from the books
- Headline word of 1933
- Undo officially
- Undo
- Invalidate, as an ordinance
- Remove from the books
- Dec. 5, 1933.
- Knell of prohibition.
- Revocation.
- Subject of Twenty-first Amendment.
- The 21st Amendment.
- Popular name for 21st Amendment.
- The undoing of the Volstead Act.
- End of the "noble experiment.”
- Event of Dec. 5, 1933.
- Swan song for bootleggers.
- Historic event of 1933.
- 1933 event.
- Finale of the Volstead Act.
- Amendment XXI
- 21st Amendment
- Abrogation
- Withdraw
- Invalidate a law
- Lift
- Statute removal
- The 21st Amendment, e.g.
- Anti-Prohibitionist's cause
- 1932 Democratic campaign plank
- Cause during Prohibition
- Officially annul
- Nullify, as a law
- Undo, as a law
- Undoing of legislation
- Void, in a way
- What the 21st Amendment achieved
- Rescind
- Countermand
- Subject of a 1933 Amendment
- Abrogate legally
- Overturn in Congress
- Cancel, legally
- Overturn, as a law
- Invalidate legislatively
- Abrogate legislation
- Kill a bill
- Annul an amendment
- Amendment XXI, to Amendment XVIII
- 21st Amendment subject
- Removal of a law
- Revoke legislatively
- Legally annul
- Abrogate, as legislation
- Take back
- Official withdrawal
- Annulment
- Law undoer