According to Ipsos-MORI, female voter turnout at the 2010 election was 64% - slightly below the 66% among men.
In the 2012 presidential election, about 54% of the voters were women. Almost 10 million more women voted than men. In the 2014 elections, about 52% of the voters were women.
A total of 29,687,604 men and women cast valid votes in the 2010 UK general election. This represents a turnout of 65.1% of the total electorate.
women
15%
The first time a woman voted in a national election was in the year 1892. Wyoming allowed women to vote when the territory became a state in 1890.
harding winning the election by a land slide
56% of women voted for Barak obama in 2008.
I'm not sure if this is what you were asking for but the election of 1920 was the first time women could vote in a federal election nation-wide.
In the United Arab Emirates, The Parliament is officially appointed by an Autocracy, no one Men or Women have the right to vote or to stand for election. In Saudi Arabia, men voted for the first time in 2005, in local elections,Women however were not to vote or to stand for election on that occasion.
Percentage was very small as only those male eligble voters were entitled to vote, and they had to be British Citizens. ---- The above answer is not strictly correct. Because women had already gained the right to vote in South Australia, they also voted to elect convention delegates in 1897 and they voted in the two rounds of referendums. In the 1900 Western Australian referendum, women also voted. However, women were not entitled to vote in NSW, Victoria, Queensland and Tasmania.
There were many different elections before women could vote, the right to vote was not obtained until 1921 by women.
55.5% of women and 52.8% of men voted in the 1996 election. In pure numbers that translates to....56.1 million women, 48.9 million men. Since 1980, women have gone to the polls in increasingly larger percentages than men.