The "Ticket" usually preceded by the name of the party.
Primary
A slate of electors is a group of electors.
A list system of voting is a proportional representation electoral system in which voters vote for a political party rather than individual candidates. Parties then receive seats in the legislative body in proportion to the number of votes they received. The list of candidates for each party is predetermined by the party, and seats are filled based on the order of candidates on the party list.
They compete in primaries.
It's called a primary election because it is the first of more than one election in a particular state for the same term of the same office.
Sure, and in fact they often do. They wouldn't do so near the general election, because by then most of the time each party has its candidates already chosen, and there's not really much point in having the guy you've already chosen debate a bunch of guys you passed over. Before the primaries, though, it does make sense to have the candidates for each party debate each other.
Abraham Lincoln was the first Republican President.It depends on what is meant by modern Republicanism. Party platforms change over time, so candidates of a century ago do not necessarily support the same issues as candidates of the same party today. That being stated, yes, Abraham Lincoln was the first Republican Party Presidential Nominee to win (in 1860).
known as a primary election or a party primary. In this type of election, party members choose their preferred candidate from a field of candidates who are running for the same party nomination. The winner of the primary election then becomes the official candidate for the party in the general election.
At the UK general election, 138 political parties nominated candidates for Parliament - the vast majority in just one parliamentary constituency. Only 56 nominated multiple candidates; 25 nominated 10 or more. No party nominated a candidate in every constituency; the party with the most candidates was the Conservative Party, which nominated 631 of its own candidates and jointly-nominated a further 17 with the Ulster Unionist Party, meaning it nominated candidates in 648 of 650 constituencies. The Labour Party and the Liberal Democrats both nominated candidates in the same 631 seats. The United Kingdom Independence Party (572 candidates) and the British National Party (338 candidates) were the only other parties who nominated candidates in more than half the seats up for election; the English, Welsh and Scottish Green parties did, however, nominate 330 between them. The average voter had a choice of between 5 and 6 party candidates in a constituency, with every constituency having at least 3 party candidates. Voters could not support parties who did not contest the constituency they voted in.
People in a political party share many of the same political beliefs and work together to get their candidates elected to office, and to defeat the opposition.
i dont know why you askin me i dont know why you askin me
In each individual party, Democrat, Republican, Green.... To be sure the presidential candidates presented to represent their party share the same interest and Platform as the party, a Caucus is held. Like a mini House of Representatives for each party.