the answer is Straight ticket ! for sure i did the research for you .
straight ticket
Voting in a CLOSED primary (apex)
Party unity voting occurs when representatives vote with their party.
Split Ticket voting is when a person belongs to one political party for example Democrat but they vote for the opposing parties candidate.
Political parties can often directly influence how people vote. For most devotees of a political party, voting with the party line is on par with religious devotion.
To vote you don't have to belong to any political party. I'm not sure what the go is in the USA But in Australia you register to vote with the electoral office. then when you go to vote you are marked of as having voted, this does not involve any political persuasion as voting in Australia as in The USA is done by secret ballot.
Either split ticket vote, straight ticket vote , democratic vote, republican vote correct answer...straight party ballot/vote
Partisan voting is when a representative of constituents (the people who vote for the representative) votes on laws that are from their party and against the opposing party. The want to vote for laws that will oppose the party they aren't from.
Depending on the voting system in use, it is possible to vote for more than one party. For the "first past the post" system a single vote per party is required. For a proportional voting system one puts a number against the candidate - 1 for the most preferred, 2 for the second preferred and so on.
People who are independent politically are those who do not want to belong to just one political party. They vote based on the issues, and they may vote for Republicans or they may vote for Democrats. They like the freedom of choosing the candidate based on his or her views, rather than just arbitrarily voting for one political party all the time.
Split ticket voting is the current ticket system; where all candidates are shown on a ballot. Unlike in the "old" days when you would receive a ticket with the candidate of the party you affiliated with.
Justices who do not consistently vote according to the political left or right but alter their voting choice depending on the issue are often referred to as swing justices or moderates. They are seen as unpredictable and their voting style can be influenced by various factors such as legal reasoning, precedent, or specific case circumstances.
If you mean: was the voting not connected to any political parties, the answer is: no, it wasn't. Political parties like the Democrats and the Republicans only came into being several decades later.