To vote, you need to be registered. Based on what the person believes, they can vote for whoever they want (people who are members of a party typically vote for whoever their party's candidate is).
an independent voter
A person who votes in the presidential election but does not vote for a congressional candidate in the same election is known as an independent voter. Another name for an independent voter is unaffiliated voter.
John B. Anderson received 6.6 percent of the popular vote in the 1980 U.S. presidential election.
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.
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.
Yes
The electors in each state are elected by the popular vote in the presidential election and swear in advance to vote for the presidential candidate who wins the election in their state.
Barack Obama won the Popular Vote in the 2008 Presidential Election by about 8,500,000 votes.
No because my mom is not voting in the primary but still gets to vote in the presadential election.
20 million
no
in the United States, absolutely! You can vote for anyone, including a write-in vote in most states (you can even vote for yourself), and nobody has the right to know who you voted for if you don't want to tell them.