Virginia has 11 representatives in the US House and two Senators in the US Senate. The number of electoral votes a state has matches the number of its representatives and senators, so Virginia has 13 electoral votes.
According to information obtained from November 2013 elections there are 5.2 million registered voters in the state of Virginia. Of these voters 308,000 were registered to vote in other states as well.
The number of electoral votes for each state is equal to the sum of its number of Senators and its number of Representatives in the U.S. House of Representatives. Based on the 2010 Census, there are 11 members of the U.S. House of Representatives from Virginia. Therefore, Virginia has 13 electoral votes
Virginia currently has 13 electoral votes, and will have that number in the 2012, 2016, and 2020 Presidential elections. This is the same number the state had in 2008.
Virginia has one vote for every resident 18 years of age or older. In the 2008 Presidential election, Virginia cast 3,723,260 votes, working out to 13 electoral votes.
Virginia does not register voters by party.
Registered voters. That means you are 18, a US Citizen, not a convicted felon, and registered to vote.
In Virginia, voters do not register by party affiliation and can choose which primary to vote in. Registered voters can participate in either the Democratic or Republican primary, regardless of their party affiliation.
There are 183,301 registered Republican voters in Delaware.
3,400,000 voters
As of 2021, Delaware has approximately 1 million registered voters.
This might help:in 2008 there were 12,752,417 registered voters in Texas.
in 2004 there were about 2,049,000 registered voters in Oregon
there are more than 250,000 registered voters (in all 50 states)
There are 9,000,000 voters
In 2012 Georgia had 5,804,812 registered voters. Of those registered voters, only 3,900,050 turned out to vote in the 2012 Presidential election.
As of September 2021, there are approximately 498,000 registered voters in Washington, D.C.