-
Voting refers to the
process of
choosing officials or
policies by
casting a ballot, a do****ent used by
people to
formally express their preferences. Republics...
-
Runoff voting can
refer to: Sequential-loser
methods based on
plurality voting: Two-round system, a
voting system where only the top two
candidates from...
-
Vote early and
vote often is a
generally tongue-in-ch****
phrase used in
relation to
elections and the
voting process.
Though rarely considered a serious...
-
Voting interest (or
voting power) in
business and
accounting means the
total number, or percent, of
votes entitled to be cast on the
issue at the time...
- ****ign
every voter an
equal vote).
Examples include publicly-traded
companies (which
typically grant stockholders one
vote for each
share they own), as...
- for example, 14% of
those who
voted for Ross
Perot said they
would not have
voted at all if he had not run.
Protest votes can take the form of blank, null...
-
voters vote sincerely;
there is no
tactical voting. (Percentage of
votes under MNTV and
Limited Voting is the
percentage of
voters who
voted for the...
- (matched). Of
control voters (not matched), 25%
voted for
Clinton regardless. Of
treatment voters, 57%
voted for Clinton,
representing a 32
point (or 128%)...
-
Dollar voting is an
analogy that
refers to the
theoretical impact of
consumer choice on producers'
actions by
means of the flow of
consumer payments to...
- up
vote in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. A
vote is a
formal method of
choosing in an election.
Vote(s) or The
Vote may also
refer to:
V.O.T.E., an...