None of the voting officials leave until the polls close and the last voter leaves and the voting materials are secured.
No, it is a noun. "Voting" would be the adjective form. For example: The person is a voter. The person is a voting adult.
A voter is expected to go into the polling station, register and receive voting paper(s). The voter is then expected to go to an unoccupied voting booth, mark the vote and return to place the vote into the ballot box, and then leave the polling station. There are no set minutes, but a voter is not expected to dally and talk to others, or to cause a fuss. Simply vote and get out - chat outside the polling station if you must, but not inside.
If you got this passage the answer is Voting technology. Votes in one of the state's largest counties have come into question after voting machines malfunctioned, according to state elections spokesman Doug Brewster. Brewster says that the state has been trying to budget funds to upgrade the machines, but the state legislature has so far refused to approve the funding.
voter registration
The Voting Act of 1965 was important in increasing voter registration.
voter registrantion :)
To educate women who would be voting
The cast of Voting Room - 2012 includes: Brandon Stegall as Voter
a voter with little interest in voting and just votes for the heck of it a voter with little interest in voting and just votes for the heck of it
Melvyn Hammarberg has written: 'The Indiana voter' -- subject(s): Elections, Indiana, Voting, Voting research
find voting for president more important than voting for members of congress
A ballot box is a sealed box with a slit, into wihch a voter puts his or her completed voting slip, or this process or method of voting.