Anyone who votes for candidates.
During an election.
To express their opinion on the candidates
To get people to vote for them.
more likely to vote.
more likely to vote
An individual who is politically engaged, informed about the candidates and issues, and has a strong belief in the importance of participating in the electoral process would be more likely to vote.
The name of the game in politics is getting your name out there so people have a chance to vote for you. If not many people know you, not many people will vote for you.
Alternative vote, also known as instant-runoff voting, is a voting system where voters rank candidates in order of preference. Candidates with the fewest first-preference votes are eliminated and their votes are redistributed to the remaining candidates based on the next preferences indicated by their voters. This process continues until a candidate receives the majority of votes and is declared the winner.
First, a military unit does not vote, or support one candidate over another. The individual MEMBERS of that unit that are adult citizens vote- and there is no one answer. Different members support different candidates.
I am guessing you mean electors for the presidential election. These people usually do not have their names on the ballot but there are sworn to vote for one of the candidates who is running president and whose name is on the ballot. So when you vote for a presidential candidate, you are really voting for his slate of electors.
They can elect the president if none of the candidates have a majority vote. They can also impeach people.
I don't believe that you can answer my question so you refuse.