Split ticket voting means that a person votes for either democrat or republican based on the candidate's values. Straight ticket voting means that a person votes for either democrat or republican every single time, no matter what their views are.
In 2012, more people began to vote a straight party ticket.
where you vote for two different parties
The party-column ballot encourages straight-ticket voting.
Now property was established as a voting prerequisite instead of church membership so the power of the church began to decline further in New England
prevented the formation of a unified social class--poor farmers--by granting political privileges to whites only
what was the decline for the Maya
where you vote for two different parties
The alternative to voting a straight ticket is to vote a split ticket.
Split Ticket voting is when a person belongs to one political party for example Democrat but they vote for the opposing parties candidate.
In split-ticket voting, a person may vote for people from different parties and for different positions.
Either split ticket vote, straight ticket vote , democratic vote, republican vote correct answer...straight party ballot/vote
You are voting split-ticket. People who vote split-ticket make it point to vote for at least one Republican and at least one Democrat.
Split ticket voting is the current ticket system; where all candidates are shown on a ballot. Unlike in the "old" days when you would receive a ticket with the candidate of the party you affiliated with.
Straight-ticket voting is voting for one party for the whole ballot. Split-ticket voting is voting for candidates of various parties for the various offices on the ballot. Some (perhaps all?) states will give you the option of selecting a straight-ticket vote at the top of the ballot so, if everyone you are voting for is of the same party, you do not need to go through the entire ballot (of course, this does not apply to primary elections).
voting a split ticket
split-ticket voting
A split-ticket refers to a ballot on which the voter has chosen candidates from different political parties when multiple offices are being decided by a single election. Split-ticket voting is in contrast to straight-ticket voting in which a voter chooses candidates from the same political party for every office on the ballot.
Ticket-splitting or split-ticket voting.