Voter registration is conducted by the local elections board or supervisor of elections. Different local governments have different names for the body that oversees elections.
It depends on where you are registered to vote. You can only be registered to vote in one electorate. If your permanent residence is in Queensland, the electorate where you live is where you should be registered, and that is the only place you can vote. You cannot vote in Tasmania, regardless of whether or not you own property there.
That depends on the laws of the place where they are registered to vote. In the United States, indebtedness has no effect on a citizen's right to vote.
You must be registered in the state of Mississipi to vote in Mississippi. If your place of residence is in Tennessee, you must vote by absentee ballot or return to Tennessee to vote.
If its done properly he marks the ballot in a place that is set up to allow him not to let any one see what he/she is doing. usually on a writing space with a privacy shield to the right and left.
It is compulsory. In Australia if you are registered to vote and live at the address where you are registered to vote it is compulsory. If you don't vote you will get a please explain note. which is easy enough to answer with some excuse like I was out camping and far away from any voting place.
Constituency. I think that is the word you are looking for :)
No, you don't have to be a registered democrat to vote in the primary.
Yes, you are still registered to vote, ask your Social Studies teacher!
Everyone who is a registered voter can vote in Rome.
As of now, approximately 75-80% of eligible Texans are registered to vote.
No you get fined if you register to vote and then don't vote.
Depends on the primary: if they state allows for people who are not registered Republicans or Democrats to vote in the primary then you are allowed.