By definition the electorate consists of those who can vote, so 0% of the electorate can not vote.If you mean what percentage of the electorate do not vote, the answer varies from election to election. In 2016, 58.5% of the electorate actually voted, so 41.5% failed to vote. If you mean something else, you need to rephrase your question.
People on the maori roll vote in their maori electorate. People on the general roll vote in the general electorate. Just like voters on the general roll cannot vote in the maori electorate, voters on the maori roll cannot vote in the general electorate. There's nothing special - still two votes, one for the party, one for the person. The only thing that differs is the electorate they are voting in.
The electorate are the people who are eligible to vote in any given election.
The electorate are people who can vote. The electorate decides who represents them.
The electorate.
The electorate
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.
The electorate
we r
an electorate is a whole body of electors. electorate can also refer to as a constituency, the group of people entitled to vote in an election.
The Electorate
The Electorate
Study Island: Citizens vote directly on a proposed law.The entire electorate, or rather, those of the electorate who choose to exercise their right to vote.