Definition & Betydelse | Engelska ordet CANDIDATES
CANDIDATES
Definition av CANDIDATES
- böjningsform av candidate
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Exempel på hur du använder CANDIDATES i en mening
- Approval voting is a single-winner electoral system in which voters mark all the candidates they support, instead of just choosing one.
- Anabaptists believe that baptism is valid only when candidates freely confess their faith in Christ and request to be baptized.
- Plurality voting refers to electoral systems in which the candidates in an electoral district who poll more than any other (that is, receive a plurality) are elected.
- In certain Christian denominations, holy orders are the ordained ministries of bishop, priest (presbyter), and deacon, and the sacrament or rite by which candidates are ordained to those orders.
- None of the elections held in Kazakhstan have been considered free or fair by Western standards with issues noted including ballot tampering, multiple voting, harassment of opposition candidates and press censorship.
- After each general election, the new-elected Maneaba ni Maungatabu (House of Assembly) nominates not less than three nor more than four of its own members to stand as candidates for President (Beretitenti).
- Immediately after the minor league Triple-A Montreal Royals folded in 1960, political leaders in Montreal sought an MLB franchise, and when the National League evaluated expansion candidates for the 1969 season, it awarded a team to Montreal.
- A military academy or service academy is an educational institution which prepares candidates for service in the officer corps.
- While historians and literary scholars overwhelmingly reject alternative authorship candidates, including Oxford, public interest in the Oxfordian theory continues.
- In these systems, parties provide lists of candidates to be elected, or candidates may declare their affiliation with a political party (in some open-list systems).
- A political party is an organization that coordinates candidates to compete in a particular country's elections.
- Score voting includes the well-known approval voting (used to calculate approval ratings), but also lets voters give partial (in-between) approval ratings to candidates.
- In a two-round system, if no candidate receives a majority of the vote in the first round, the two candidates with the most votes in the first round proceed to a second round where all other candidates are excluded.
- From the country's independence in 1962, only matai could vote and stand as candidates in elections to parliament.
- Voters have the option to rank candidates, and their vote may be transferred according to alternative preferences if their preferred candidate is eliminated or elected with surplus votes, so that their vote is used to elect someone they prefer over others in the running.
- A prominent lawyer in Indiana, he became an active and well known member of the Democratic Party by stumping across the state for other candidates and organizing party rallies that later helped him win election as the 27th governor of Indiana.
- In such systems, while chances for third-party candidates winning election to major national office are remote, it is possible for groups within the larger parties, or in opposition to one or both of them, to exert influence on the two major parties.
- These organizations generally do not nominate candidates for election, but some of them have in the past; they otherwise function similarly to political parties.
- Weakly interacting massive particles (WIMPs) are hypothetical particles that are one of the proposed candidates for dark matter.
- In single transferable voting, the election threshold is called the quota, and it is possible to achieve it by receiving first-choice votes alone or by a combination of first-choice votes and votes transferred from other candidates based on lower preferences.
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