In the United States each person can vote for one congressman and two senators.
Imagine that you divide a state with invisible lines and the population within those lines is what makes an electroal vote. Pretty much like a district. When you vote, your vote goes into your electoral area. Say we have 500 people in an electroal area in the state of Alabama. 450 people vote R and 50 vote D. Then you have one electroal vote for R. If you have 251 vote R and 249 vote D you have one more R electroal vote. Bottom line is that it is the people who vote but it isn't necessarily counted by each individual vote.
There are people called electors who make the votes for your state. each individual who votes just influences the elector from there state who they want them to vote for. Overall the elector can vote for whoever they want so...
Once to each candidates ie governor you vote one to him or her
It means you can vote before the Election Day and to vote when there is an election. Only one out of 3 people who can vote don’t vote. When people don’t vote they leave the decisions to others.
The US Senate has 100 members - 2 from each state- and all of them have one vote each.
"One person, one vote, one value" is a democratic principle that holds each person's vote should carry the same weight regardless of their economic status or social standing. It emphasizes the idea that each individual's right to vote is equal and should be valued equally in the electoral process.
one vote per state
its one vote
state is the missing word. Each state delegation in the House gets one vote. States with more than one congressman would either have to agree on their vote or else abstain from voting.
Yes, please do. ____________ Your vote is yours. No one can tell you who to vote for. It is your choice. Vote Democrat, vote Republican, vote for an independent candidate. NO ONE legally knows who you voted for in the last election unless you tell them. You can switch your vote with each election. One of the great things about democracy. You can choose who you vote for.
Each state had one vote in Congress, which gave each state equal power.