The voter turnout percentage for US elections varies every year, and historical data date back as far as 1828, which had a turnout of 57.6%. The highest voter turnout rate to date was in 1876.
30 percent
It can vary based on definitions and surveys, but generally around 20-30% identify as liberal, while around 30-40% identify as conservative in the US. The remaining portion often identifies as moderate or independent.
The percentage of registered voters who participate in US elections can vary by election. In recent years, turnout rates have ranged from around 50-60% in midterm elections to 60-65% in presidential elections.
All registered voters are entitled to vote for the state's US senators. Of course they never have 100% turn-out and there is always the possibility in any election that some voters will be illegally denied a chance to vote. That is why both parties assign people to watch the polls.
The percentage of undecided voters in the US can vary depending on the specific election and polling data. Generally, it hovers around 5-10% leading up to an election, but this can fluctuate based on campaign developments, candidate performance, and external factors. Polling organizations track this number to gauge the level of uncertainty in the electorate.
If I am not mistaken there were only 85 Alfa Romeo 164Q sold in 1995, the last year they were sold in the US.
Voter turnout in the US is typically low; only a relatively small percentage of those eligible to vote do so. Most frequent voters are older and more conservative. Less-frequent voters are younger. National elections typically get better turnout than local or state elections.
According to the Washington Post, "Overall, turnout in the midterm elections was projected at 42 percent of registered voters, about 1.2 percentage points higher than in 2006." (It should be noted that even though there was a slightly larger turnout than in 2006, about 58% of voters stayed home.) Also, according to most polls, the makeup of the electorate this time was different: there was a large "enthusiasm gap," such that Republicans voted in larger percentages than Democrats did; also, younger voters decreased, as did minority voters; and older voters, as well as white voters, came out in larger numbers than in 2008. 82.5 million people voted, many of whom were spurred by anger over the lingering recession. But it is worth noting that this number was far fewer than the more than 131 million people who voted in the presidential election of 2008-- generally, presidential elections bring out a much greater number of voters than midterm elections do.
they are lazy
All registered US voters.
190 million
Do the voters elect electors not the presidential candidates