I hate Lebanon u losers say genes instead of jeans(morons)u guys are the meanest
country in the world and u all smell like poo!
He won the presidential election so clearly the majority of America does.
An open primary means that anyone of any party, including Independents, can vote in that election. The Presidential Preference election requires either Republican or Democratic party affiliation.
The America First Party did not nominate anyone for the 2004 presidential election, but they endorsed Constitution Party candidate Michael Peroutka of Maryland.
He beat W. Lee "Pappy" O'daniel and Coke Stevenson for the democratic senate primary in 1949, then went on to defeat the Republican candidate in the General Election.. In the 1964 Presidential election, he beat out Barry Goldwater. He lost the race for the senate to W. Lee Pappy O'Daniel in 1941, the only time anyone ever defeated him in an election.
No. While exercising your right to vote more often than every 4 years is awesome, you don't have to vote in any one election to qualify to vote in the next one. If anyone tried to prevent you from voting on the basis of your voting history, they are violating your right to vote. You should calmly state that it has no bearing on your right to vote today, and that you intend to do so. If the person continues to obstruct you, call your local officials and insist that you be allowed to vote. Anyone who tries to stop you from having a voice probably doesn't have your best interests at heart.
Determines who are the party reprensentitives to the national election. A caucus can also mean any meeting of any sort by anyone, not just political candidates in this upcoming presidential election who use a complicated sounding word to shock and awe registered voters with political buzzwords to further their agenda.
There seems to be some confusion in your question. Ulysses S. Grant was the 18th President of the United States and served from 1869 to 1877. There was no presidential election in 1972 involving Grant or anyone running as a liberal Republican candidate. Richard Nixon, a Republican, ran against George McGovern, a Democrat, in the 1972 presidential election.
Sanders didn't loose the election he lost the primary. He just didn't have the money or backing of the power brokers. Hillary had this all tied up before the primary began. She has been working on her election since 2008. The moral to this is if anyone wants to run they need the party support, to organize a campaign early, and to reach the people who can support a campaign. Anyone can run for president, but not all can get what they need to support their election.
no, pork isn't normally eaten in Lebanon anyone can eat pork, not just the lebanese -_-
The electoral vote was very close and four states sent two sets of ballots in, with different results and these conflicted results were enough to change the winner. Most of the problems were with Southern states who were voting in their first election since the Civil War.
in the United States, absolutely! You can vote for anyone, including a write-in vote in most states (you can even vote for yourself), and nobody has the right to know who you voted for if you don't want to tell them.
The Republican nominee, John McCain, won Alaska. Anyone who knows who is running mate was should know the answer to this question. She was Governor Sarah Palin, from Alaska. Therefore Alaska went to McCain-Palin.