30 percent
In 2012 Georgia had 5,804,812 registered voters. Of those registered voters, only 3,900,050 turned out to vote in the 2012 Presidential election.
These are all estimates from preliminary research in the internet. US population as of right now (2012) is approx 315,000,000 minus Population of minors (76,000,000) = 239,000,000 eligible adults minus felons and non citizens approx (20,000,000) = 219,000,000 eligible voters minus people that are not registered at all (?????) = unknown Total votes cast for the 2012 presidential election = approx 118,000,000. So there are about 100,000,000 people out there that are just not voting or not registered. 53.2% of Eligible voters voted: 27.2% Obama 26% Romney.
In the 2012 presidential election, approximately 66.3% of registered voters in Ohio cast their ballots. This turnout was slightly higher than the national average for that election year. Ohio's participation was significant as it played a crucial role in the election outcome.
60.8 % of eligible voters in Nebraska voted in the 2012 Presidential election, according to the link given just below.
October 2012 Census data shows that there were 5,649,934 registered Democrats, 2,826,913 registered Republicans, and 11,477,613 total registered voters in New York State.?
In the 2020 general election, Greenlee County in Arizona had the lowest voter turnout percentage with around 35.7% of registered voters casting their ballots.
As of January 2012, there are 428,560 voters registered with the AIP in California.
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.
1992 2012 201 million 290 million
The Undecided Ohio Voters - 2012 was released on: USA: November 2012
As of May 2012, 27.7% of Californians are unregistered voters, which is down 2.3% from 2008. This means about 10,526,000 Californians are unregistered voters.
First-line Supervisors/Managers of Retail Sales Workers a+ registered nurses