A cattus
For a special someone that you are romantically involved in, yes.
Observations, studies, training friendlies, kill teams, reconnaissance, etc.
Roberto Clemente was inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1973 by a special Election. After his death in 1972 the five year waiting period was waived.
The founding fathers were proposing and currently acting in a republican government. That is a government where the people at large appoint representatives to act on their behalf. Kind of a multiple person power of attorney. They were sent by their home state legislatures to reform the government and those people who sent them were the representatives of their constituants. When they say "We the people of the United States..." and go on to explain their purpose in the constitution they end with phrase "do ordain and establish this constitution" they meant that and something more. They were sent by the people and were acting (they believed) in the interest of the people. Moreover, they knew that the ratification process required in the constitution would confirm the volition of the people with respect to the document. The ratification was to be done by representatives in a special election. In effect it literally would be the people themselves who would ordain and establish the constitution.
Every eligible voter is entitled to be registered in the electoral roll of a constituency in which he ordinarily resides. In some cases, it may happen that the Central Government employee residing, and enrolled as a voter, in a particular place/constituency, say Delhi (where the election is to be held), may be employed in any office located at some other place, say, Faridabad/Ghaziabad, etc., in such cases, the individual Central Government employee may be granted special casual leave, if his office does not happen to be closed on that particular day, to enable him to exercise his franchise. http://eci.nic.in/archive/instruction/compendium/holidays/HOL_86A.HTM
The state has a special election.
In Arizona, primary elections are indeed scheduled for the 12th Tuesday before a general or special election. This timing allows voters to select their party candidates for the upcoming election. The primary process is crucial for determining which candidates will appear on the ballot in the general election, shaping the political landscape in the state.
Vacancies in the House are filled either by special election or by appointment. Typically the governer of the affected state will make the appointment. This varies from state to state. The seat may also remain vacant until the next election cycle.
Each state has a constitution that specifies what happens. Usually the lt. Governor takes over and there is a special election, or the state house representatives appoint a pro tem Governor.
If no presidential candidate receives a majority of electoral votes then the U.S. House of Representatives will elect the President from the three candidates with the majority of votes in a special election in which each state gets one vote. This was established by the Twelfth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
special
Presuming we are talking about the United States of America, then the answer is that the House of Representatives decides the election from among the top three candidates in a special vote in which each state delegation gets a single vote. ( The senate then chooses the vice-president.)
The House of Representatives chooses the president if no candidates receives a majority of electoral votes. The House votes in a special way- each state gets one vote. The congressmen from each state meet and determine what their state's vote will be.
Usually the state governor appoints a replacement for the dead representative until a new election can be held. Since representatives are elected every two years, usually a special election is not called.
The House of Representatives elects the President in this case. There is a special procedure for doing this specified in the Constitution.
In 1824, no one won a majority of the electoral vote. In such an event, according to the US Constitution, the House of Representatives elects the presidents from among the top three in electoral vote. The election is held in a special way -- each state's delegates cast one vote for the state.
The required number is more than half of the total. If no candidate gets this required majority, the House of Representatives chooses the president from among the top three candidates using a special procedure in which each state gets one vote.