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Here are additional clues for each of the words in today's Mini Crossword. NYT Mini Across Hints 1 Across: "Vertically challenged" — HINT: It starts with the letter "S"
In the United States, postal voting (commonly referred to as mail-in voting, vote-by-mail or vote from home [48]) is a process in which a ballot is mailed to the home of a registered voter, who fills it out and returns it via postal mail or by dropping it off in-person at a voting center or into a secure drop box.
"Vote yourself a farm and horses" – Abraham Lincoln, referring to Republican support for a law granting homesteads on the American frontier areas of the West. "The Union must and shall be preserved!" – Abraham Lincoln "Protection to American industry" – Abraham Lincoln "True to the Union and the Constitution to the last." – Stephen A ...
A voting booth or polling booth (in British English) [6] is a room or cabin in a polling station where voters are able to cast their vote in private to protect the secrecy of the ballot. [7] [8] Commonly the entrance to the voting booth is a retractable curtain. Usually access to the voting booth is restricted to a single person, with ...
As early voting breaks records across the U.S., political analysts and campaigns are reviewing reams of data on the voters, looking for clues to key questions: Who is voting?
The 1980 presidential vote by demographic subgroup Demographic subgroup Carter Reagan Anderson % of total vote Total vote 41 51 7 100 Ideology Liberals: 60 28 11 17 Moderates: 43 49 8 46 Conservatives: 23 73 3 33 Party Democrats: 67 27 6 43 Republicans: 11 85 4 28 Independents: 31 55 12 23 Sex Men 37 55 7 51 Women 46 47 7 49 Race White: 36 56 7 ...
Source (popular vote): Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections [21] Source (electoral vote):"Electoral College Box Scores 1789–1996". National Archives and Records Administration (a) These candidates received votes from Electors who were pledged to Horace Greeley, who died before the electoral votes were cast.
It was noticeable that the "other" vote was only about seven thousand less than four years earlier. The "other" vote was a plurality in nine counties in the states of Georgia and Texas. The size of the vote cast for the defeated Bryan in 1908 is clear evidence of perhaps the most striking feature of the American presidential vote.