A voter will get one vote. Vote for whoever you want, but each voter gets one vote.
UK AnswerDepends on the type of election. In General Elections every voter has one vote. In European and local elections in NI, candidates are ranked acording to preference 1,2,3etc... In some other elections voters have a 'second preference' vote and in most local elections in England and Wales, you have as many votes as there are councillors to be elected (I have seen 14 votes cast for Arundel Town Council on the same ballot paper)once in every election.
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It depends on how long you can live. Seriously, it's a major crime to vote more than once per election.
Three times as many people voted in the election of 1828 as has voted in 1824
Many people vote and get others to vote on election day. They also watch the results come in on television.
This has happened three times officially- 1824, 1876, and 2000.
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Not here in the USA, because there would be no way to monitor how many times someone voted.
Yes, as long as you are a registered to voter, you can vote in the presidential election, even if you did not vote in the primary election. If you have not registered to vote yet, the deadline is 30 days before any election. If you miss that deadline, you can still register and vote in the election by late registering at your county election office.
No. You are free to vote whomever you want in each election.
If you vote in a primary election, you have to designate a Party. In a General Election, you vote for anybody on the ballot.
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