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voting |
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voting, method of registering collective approval or disapproval of a person or a proposal. The term generally refers to the process by which citizens choose candidates for public office or decide political questions submitted to them. However, it may also describe the formal recording of opinion of a group on any subject. In either sense it is a means of transforming numerous individual desires into a coherent and collective basis for decision.
In early human history voting was simply the communication of approval or disapproval by tribal members of certain proposals offered by a chieftain, who typically held an elected office. Eventually in political voting, the ballot ballot, means of voting for candidates for office. The choice may be indicated on or by the ballot forms themselves—e.g., colored balls (hence the term ballot, which is derived from the Italian ballotta, In recent years a great deal of study has been devoted to the analysis of voting behavior in nonauthoritarian nations. Through the use of complex sampling surveys attempts have been made to determine on what basis a voter makes a decision. Findings reveal that voting is influenced not only by political differences but also by religious, racial, and economic factors. For this reason nearly all politicians rely on a sampling survey, or poll poll, technique for ascertaining the attitudes or opinions of the total, or some segment of the total, population on given questions, usually on political, economic, and social conditions. See also election election, choosing a candidate for office in an organization by the vote of those enfranchised to cast a ballot .
BibliographySee G. Almond and S. Verba, The Civic Culture (1963); A. Campbell et al., The American Voter (1960); R. Lane, Political Life (1959); L. Milbraith, Political Participation (1965); R. Farquharson, The Theory of Voting (1969); F. Greenstein, The American Party System and the American People (2d ed. 1970). How to thank TFD for its existence? Tell a friend about us, add a link to this page, add the site to iGoogle, or visit webmaster's page for free fun content. |
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| As a voting citizen I need to know what's going on. Therefore, I, as a voting citizen, residing within the San Fernando Valley, should be able to vote for or against all of our Los Angeles City Council members and California legislators in any election, regardless of what community they represent, under the premise that their votes and actions in their elected positions could possibly adversely impact myself and my community, even though they may be physically removed from my locality. As an average taxpaying, voting citizen, I see projects such as LANI as having the potential to end the bureaucratic stranglehold of our city and to give local residents control over their own neighborhoods' destinies, while at the same time getting much-needed improvements done |
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