Want this question answered?
By election.
Yes. Voting (or not) in primaries has nothing to do with your ability to vote in the general election.
Next election is in 2016
In most states, the winner of the popular vote receives all of the electoral votes. However, two states, Nebraska and Maine, allocate their electoral votes proportionally based on the winner of each congressional district and the state's overall popular vote.
South Carolina
the state of Washington held the first election
In the 1860 presidential election, Lincoln did not win in the State of Kentucky. The winner there was John Breckenridge.
Yes, you can vote in the general election without voting in the primaries.
Neither. There are primary and general elections. All the Democrats who want to be in Congress from your district will compete in the Democratic primary; all the Republicans will do likewise. Now, in most states whoever wins the Democratic primary will run against the person who wins the Republican primary in the general election. In Washington state, the top two vote-getters from the primary election will run in the general. This means that in some parts of Washington state, like the Columbia Basin where there are almost no Democrats, two Republicans could be on the general election ballot.
In the U. S., a general election can mean either any election in which people are elected to fill local, state and/or national offices, as opposed to a primary election, or any election in which people are elected to fill state and/or national offices, as opposed to a local election.
you have to register and pay the fee to the state election board.
DONT REMEMBER BUT HE BOUGHT OUR HOUSE IN 2004