Regardless of your party affiliation, you can vote for whomever you want.
Yes, as long as people continue to vote for them.
Florida is actually a swing state, which means it sometimes chooses democratic and sometimes republican. It is sort of bipartisan.
Yes, in the primary if you are a Democrat, you are only allowed to vote for candidates running in the Democratic primary. But in the general election, all registered voters can choose from the Democratic candidate, Republican candidate, Independent candidate, or any other candidate that appears on the November ballot.
Yes, It's A Democratic State.
Our Taxes will be lower
REPUBLICAN
If I voted for a republican sheriff can I still vote demacrat president
During the primary elections, one must vote for someone in their affiliated party. Once the general election is underway, the individual can vote for someone of the opposite party.
When you don't know it you will vote Democratic or Republican.
Huckabee won the republican vote and Obama won the Democratic Vote
no, not in the primary but you can vote for whom ever you want in the nov. election.
When voting at the poles a Republican can vote on the Democratic ballot in Texas. A person can vote for whomever they choose at the polls at any time.
Hawaii is one of the most solid Blue/Democrat states in the nation but it does have a Republican Governor.
I don't know how he voted in the last election, but I do know that he is a registered republican.
Not usually. It votes overwhelmingly Democratic.
Virginia does not have party registration. In Virginia a person can vote in one primary, republican or democrat, but not both. So a republican can vote in the democratic primary. Should you chose the democrat you most agree with or the one you think has the greatest chance of loosing to the republican is up to you.
In a presidential election where the candidates are from either the republican or democratic parties, that would indeed be the logical conclusion of their voting choices.