Yes; party registration has no relationship to how you vote in a general election. In a general election, you can vote for whoever you want, no matter what your party registration.
No, he is not and never has been. He is a registered Democrat. There is only one registered Socialist in Congress at this time: Vermont senator Bernie Sanders.
Harry Reid is a Democrat. He served as a Democratic senator from Nevada from 1987 to 2017 and was also the Senate Majority Leader from 2007 to 2015.
Bernard "Bernie" Sanders is an American politician and the junior United States senator from Vermont. A Democrat as of 2015, he had been the longest-serving independent in U.S. congressional history.
No, he has not. It is a very common myth among some Republicans that the president is a socialist, but in reality, he is not. There is one senator, Bernie Sanders, of Vermont, who is registered as a Socialist. But President Obama is a registered Democrat.
The Constitution only permits two Senators from each State (Article I, Section 3). Senators are elected by state-wide popular vote (Seventeenth Amendment). Although there is no requirement that a Senator belong to a particular party, is is very unusual for an independent or third-party candidate to win a state-wide election against the candidates from the Democrat and Republican parties. It does, occasionally happen, however. In 2006, Joseph Lieberman, the Senator from Connecticut failed to secure the Democrat party's nomination for his reelection, so he ran as an independent and won. Also in 2006, Bernard Sanders, a more long-standing independent, was elected to the Senate in Vermont.
This is straight from the Official U.S. Senate Website: "111th Congress (2009-2011) Majority Party: Democrat (57 seats) Minority Party: Republican (40 seats) Other Parties: 1 Independent; 1 Independent Democrat Total Seats: 100 Note: Minnesota's class 2 seat remains undecided. Senator Arlen Specter was reelected in 2004 as a Republican, and became a Democrat on April 30, 2009. Senator Joseph Lieberman of Connecticut was reelected in 2006 as an independent candidate, and became an Independent Democrat. Senator Bernard Sanders of Vermont was elected in 2006 as an Independent."
Democrat
Democrat
he was a democrat
They can be either.
No. She is a Democrat.
Democrat Senator from New Jersey