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Arizona has 11 electoral votes as of April 7, 2008. to find the answer you may follow the following link. http://www.answers.com/how%20many%20electoral%20votes%20does%20arizona%20have
Arizona has 10 electoral votes and in the 2008 Presidential election they were won by John McCain.
Apex By 2012 a higher percentage of the country‘s population lived in Arizona
(As of 2012) California - 55 Texas - 38 New York - 29 Florida - 29 Illinois - 20 Pennsylvania - 20 Ohio - 18 Michigan - 16 Georgia - 16 North Carolina - 15 New Jersey - 14 Virginia - 13 Washington - 12 Indiana - 11 Massachusetts - 11 Tennessee - 11 Arizona - 11 Maryland - 10 Minnesota - 10 Missouri - 10 Wisconsin - 10 Alabama - 9 Colorado - 9 South Carolina - 9 Kentucky - 8 Louisiana - 8 Connecticut - 7 Oklahoma - 7 Oregon - 7 Arkansas - 6 Iowa - 6 Kansas - 6 Mississippi - 6 Nevada - 6 Utah - 6 Nebraska - 5 New Mexico - 5 West Virginia - 5 Hawaii - 4 Idaho - 4 Maine - 4 New Hampshire - 4 Rhode Island - 4 Alaska - 3 Delaware - 3 District Of Columbia - 3 Montana - 3 North Dakota - 3 South Dakota - 3 Vermont - 3 Wyoming - 3 Note: the top 11 states have a controlling majority. The number is determined by the total number of representatives and senators a state has in Congress.
Oh, dude, I mean, technically, each state has a different number of electoral votes based on their population, so listing them in alphabetical order doesn't really help. But, like, if you really want to know, the smallest number of electoral votes a state can have is 3, and the largest is 55 in California. So, yeah, it's a bit more complicated than just alphabetical order.
In 26 states plus D.C. you may vote early either in person or by mail without an excuse. Those states are AK, AZ, CA, CO, FL, GA, HI, ID, IL, IA, KS, ME, MD, MT, NE, NV, NM, NC, ND, OH, OK, SD, UT, VT, WI & WY. In 1 state, NJ, you may vote early without an excuse only by mail. In 6 states you may vote early in person without an excuse or by mail with an excuse. Those states are AR, IN, LA, TN, TX & WV. In 15 states you may vote early only by mail and only with an excuse. Those states are AL, CT, DE, KY, MA, MI, MN, MS, MO, NH, NY, PA, RI, SC & VA. In the other 2 states, all voting is done by mail; nobody votes in person, even on Election Day. Those states are OR & WA.
1952: Dwight D. Eisenhower (R, war general from Texas) defeated Adlai Stevenson (D, Governor of Illinois) 1956: Dwight D. Eisenhower (R, Incumbent) defeated Adlai Stevenson (D, former Governor of Illinois) 1960: John F. Kennedy (D, Senator of Massachusetts) defeated Richard Nixon (R, incumbent Vice President, former Senator of California) 1964: Lyndon B. Johnson (D, incumbent President, former Vice President and Senator of Texas) defeated Barry Goldwater (R, Senator of Arizona) 1968: Richard Nixon (R, former Vice President and Senator of California) defeated Hubert Humphrey (D, incumbent Vice President, former Senator of Minnesota) and George Wallace (Independent, former Governor of Alabama) 1972: Richard Nixon (R, incumbent President) defeated George McGovern (D, Senator of South Dakota) 1976: Jimmy Carter (D, Governor of Georgia) defeated Gerald Ford (R, incumbent President, former Representative of Michigan) 1980: Ronald Reagan (R, former Governor of California) defeated Jimmy Carter (D, incumbent President) and John B. Anderson (independent, Representative of Illinois) 1984: Ronald Reagan (R, incumbent President) defeated Walter Mondale (D, former Vice President and Senator of Minnesota) 1988: George H. W. Bush (R, incumbent Vice President and former Representative of Texas) defeated Michael Dukakis (Governor of Massachusetts) 1992: Bill Clinton (D, Governor of Arkansas) defeated George H. W. Bush (R, incumbent President) and Ross Perot (independent, businessman) 1996: Bill Clinton (D, incumbent President) defeated Bob Dole (R, Senator of Kansas) and Ross Perot (Reform Party, businessman) 2000: George W. Bush (R, Governor of Texas) defeated Al Gore (D, incumbent Vice President and former Senator of Tennessee). Gore won the popular vote, but not the electoral vote 2004: George W. Bush (R, incumbent President) defeated John Kerry (D, Senator of Massachusetts) 2008: Barack Obama (D, Senator of Illinois) defeated John McCain (R, Senator of Arizona)
It was the fore-runner to our "Miranda rights" -Our Miranda rights are the rights cops read to us when we are being arrested. Thy came about during the Miranda vs. Az where the man convicted was not read his rights. he was found guilty but appealed to the supreme court. he was then released innocent because of the fact that the police officers in action did not fullfill their duties to read the suspect his rights.