Does AN independent belong to a individual party? AND no he votes for whichever party he he thinks is the better choice.
No they don't have to. Most do, but some are independent and do not belong to any political party.
It is not public information. From his writing he appears to be an independent.
He is an independent candidate for President of the United States
The old Republican party believed that a specific power should belong to each individual state. The Republican party believed that each state had a choice of which religions could or could not be practiced within that states borders.
An Independent
No, you can be independent.
She does not belong to any party, her office is independent of political affiliation.
They don't belong to a political party, that's why they're called independent!
No they don't have to. Most do, but some are independent and do not belong to any political party.
Christy Clark used to be in a independent party but she now belongs to the party Surrey First
Independent
He did not choose to belong to a political party. He was a member of Parliament, but considered himself an independent, who focused on the cause of ending slavery.
It is not public information. From his writing he appears to be an independent.
If an independent is someone who does not belong to any party, the Roosevelt was an independent only when he was very young. He was elected to state office as a Republican when was 23, so he no doubt joined the party sometime before that. After he did not get the Republican nomination in 1912, he started his own party, the Bull Moose Party, so he was rather a member of an independent party.
George Washington was an independent. He did not belong to any political party.
He is an independent candidate for President of the United States
Yes, the word independent is a noun, a singular, common noun; a word for a politician or voter who does not belong to any political party. The noun form for the adjective independent is independence.