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Yes, you can still vote in the presidential election even if you did not vote in the Montana primary election. Primary elections and general elections are separate, and not voting in the primary does not disqualify you from voting in the general election.
You must be registered for at least 29 days before you can vote in an election. Since Florida is a closed primary state, only voters who are registered members of a political parties may vote for their respective party's candidates in a primary election. The presidential preference primary is January 31, 2012 so you would have to be registered by January 3, 2012. The primary election is August 14, 2012 , with July 16th the last day to register, and the general election is November 6, 2012, with October 9th being the last day to register.
Yes, if you have registered in time according to your state's laws. All states have some kind of voter registration deadline. If your state's deadline is before your birthday, you can usually register before hand, because you "are or will be 18 years of age or older on or before the election day" or some such provision. The election day is November 4th.
21 days before the election...if the election is on Nov. 4th, then you have to be registered by Oct. 14.
yes, as long as you are registered to vote before the deadline
Yes. Several times.
They need to request an absentee ballot from their county's Elections Division, fill it out, and mail it in before the deadline.
The deadline to change your party affiliation before a primary election varies depending on your state. It is important to check your state's specific voter registration deadlines, which can typically be found on the official website of your state's Secretary of State or Board of Elections. Remember to plan ahead and make any necessary changes well before the deadline to ensure your voter registration is up to date.
This is called a poll tax. It is a tax levied as a precondition of registering as an elector ('poll' meaning 'the counting of votes at an election').
The deadline is October 20, 2008 or in general 15 days before any election. You may register online at http://www.sos.ca.gov/elections/elections_vr.htm.
The 2000 election was determined by the American voting public. The official result was finally decided by Katherine Harris, Florida's Secretary of State, when she was forced to certified the original, official election results because results from the requests for extensive hand-recounting could not be submitted to the State before the statutorily-defined deadline. The Supreme court later upheld the decision.
Assuming you are a registered student, Fall classes can be registered for online at any time prior to the start of the Fall semester. Classes can further be changed with professors' permission any time before the add/drop deadline, about two weeks into the semester. Registering earlier means more classes are available, and admitted students can check their priority registration date to find out when they may start registering.