Want this question answered?
In the US, the loser could win 39 states plus DC and still lose if he lost all of the 11 largest states.
Answer 1 Disagree. There was still an election that could change the direction of the US. There was still the possibility that England wold recognize the Confederate States.
The model Parliament was a law that stated that commoners (citizens) could sit in as the jury in the court. We still use this today in the official court.
Yes, you can still vote in the presidential election even if you did not vote in the Montana primary election. Primary elections and general elections are separate, and not voting in the primary does not disqualify you from voting in the general election.
still done by phone
No.
The voting rights act of 1965 declared that any new election laws could not be enacted in any state, without being reviewed by the United States Justice Department. This law is still in force today.
No because my mom is not voting in the primary but still gets to vote in the presadential election.
No, that would still be plagarism...you could put the sentence you want to use in quotation marks and then put which book you got it from or who stated it.
The reason why people vote for the president even though it is based on an electoral college is because if you are voting for a slate of people which vote for the president, it is still important! It is even more important if you are in a battleground state because then your vote could help decide the election! (example: Albert Gore Jr. vs. George W. Bush; 300 votes in Florida could have changed the outcome of the election!)
By the time of the election week almost everyone knew who was going to win and had acted on that so the 10 days before the election make little difference. Maybe a close race in the senate or even house might be seen as good for a company or industry and people might still be acting based upon who in a committe's election is in doubt.
lame duck