Examples of vote in the following topics:
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- In 1920, the Nineteenth Amendment to the Constitution gave women the right to vote and, today, women vote at similar rates to men.
- There are a variety of theories that help to explain who votes.
- Other approaches examine the question of the rationality of voting: does voting serve the self-interest of any given individual, and what are the interests or issues that might change someone's voting patterns?
- In spite of this long-term institutional barrier to voting, women today vote at similar rates to men.
- Women also do not generally vote as a bloc, and instead tend to be as diverse in their voting patterns as men.
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- Common voting systems are majority rule, proportional representation, or plurality voting with a number of criteria for the winner.
- A voting system contains rules for valid voting, and how votes are counted and aggregated to yield a final result.
- Common voting systems are majority rule, proportional representation, or plurality voting with a number of variations and methods such as first-past-the-post or preferential voting.
- The plurality voting system is a single-winner voting system often used to elect executive officers or to elect members of a legislative assembly that is based on single-member constituencies .
- Compare and contrast the voting systems of majority rule, proportional representation and plurality voting
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- Compulsory voting is a system by which electors are obliged to vote in elections or attend a polling place on voting day.
- Compulsory voting ensures a large voter turnout.
- Ease of voting is a factor in rates of turnout.
- Red: Compulsory voting, enforced.
- Pink: Compulsory voting, not enforced.
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- Independently, income has some effect on whether or not people vote.
- The more educated a person is, the more likely he or she is to vote.
- In comparison, only 39% of those without a high school diploma voted that year.
- This is a figure illustrating the different rates of voting in the 2008 U.S.
- The higher income, the more likely a person is to vote.
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- In contrast to party voting, issue voting is when voters base their election decisions on political issues.
- Individuals vote for the candidate that best matches their own views.
- Issue voting has become prominent in recent elections.
- While issue voting has risen in recent years, many factors can complicate it.
- Issue voting has affected the decisions Americans make at the voting booth.
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- In some elections, voters are motivated to vote a certain way based on specific policy preferences, which is called issue voting.
- In "issue voting," voters cast their vote based primarily on specific political issues .
- According to the theory of issue voting, voters vote based on policy preferences; they compare the candidates' respective principles against their own in order to decide who to vote for.
- Issue voting is often contrasted with party voting.
- Differentiate between issue voting and party voting and the reason(s) a voter would opt for one or the other
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- There are different explanations for voting patterns.
- Others examine the question of rationality in voting: does voting serve the self-interest of any given individual, and what are the interests or issues that might change someones voting patterns?
- During the early Reconstruction period, Black residents voted in large numbers .
- While the fifteenth amendment provided legal protection for voting rights based on race, during the Jim Crow era, politicians created new institutions to suppress the vote of Black residents.
- This act removed a large institutional barrier to voting and helped to further protect voting rights.
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- On average, Latino citizens continue to vote at significantly lower rates than non-Latino white voters.
- On average Latino citizens continue to vote at significantly lower rates that non-Latino white voters.
- There are many potential approaches that can be taken to explain variations in voting rates.
- Others examine the question of the rationality of voting: does voting serve the self-interest of any given individual, and what are the interests or issues that might change someone's voting patterns?
- As such, people may live for many years in the US without being able to vote.
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- Voting is the most quintessential form of political participation, although many eligible voters do not vote in elections.
- Every citizen gets one vote that counts equally .
- In order to participate in voting, citizens must be registered.
- Still, many people do not vote regularly.
- Social, cultural, and economic factors can keep people from voting, or sometimes barriers to voting are informal.