According to the credit society's constitution, a minimum of 25 per cent of members were required to make the vote count, with 75 per
cent of those voting needed to support demutualisation for it to go ahead.
The deal with Saputo is subject to approval by an ordinary resolution of voting shareholders, with a more than 50 per
cent of the votes needed to be in favour to pass.
Not exact matches
The three boards that reached high thresholds numbers
needed: B.C. Northern Real Estate Board (75 per
cent needed and 89 per
cent of agents
voting were in favour); Real Estate Board
of Greater Vancouver (REBGV)(67 per
cent needed and 69 per
cent of votes in favour); and South Okanagan Real Estate Board (75 per
cent needed and 79 per
cent of those
voting favoured a merger).
The three boards that failed to get the critical
vote required were: Fraser Valley Real Estate Board (75 per
cent required and only 63 per
cent of those who
voted were in favour); Kamloops & District Real Estate Association (75 per
cent vote needed and 70 per
cent of those
voting favoured the merger); and Okanagan - Mainland Real Estate Board (67 per
cent needed and 56 per
cent vote acquired).
UKIP's national support was spread out too thinly for it to turn its
vote share into seats; this was in stark contrast to the SNP, which
needed only 4.7 per
cent of the nation - wide
vote to obtain 56 seats.
The following assumes, firstly, that no party has an overall majority (once Sinn Fein's abstention from the chamber is taken into account), and that in spite
of the possibility that they could top the polls in the popular
vote, that the Lib Dems will not win enough
votes to have the most seats in the new Commons (they would
need between 37 - 40 per
cent to be sure
of that happening).
Given that Rio Tinto and Mitsubishi Development in aggregate hold more than 20 per
cent of Coal & Allied, in accordance with the requirements
of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth), Coal & Allied shareholders (other than Rio Tinto and Mitsubishi Development and their respective subsidiaries) will
need to
vote to approve the relevant joint bid arrangements between Rio Tinto, Mitsubishi Development and Hunter Valley Resources and their respective related bodies corporate («Coal & Allied Shareholder Approval») before the Scheme can proceed.
The British people are clear that this is an important
vote, yet they do not feel they are getting the information they
need to make a decision — nearly half (48 per
cent)
of voters say they do not have the information
needed to make a choice.
«How can a president say that he will only attend to the
needs of those who gave him 97 per
cent vote and neglect others who didn't
vote for him?
As Pete Hoskin explains here, team Miliband's secret plan for the next election is called the «35 per
cent strategy» — because 35 per
cent of the
vote is all that Labour
needs to win in 2015.
With the former Ukip leader's party getting just 2 per
cent of the
vote in the election, we don't even
need to say how pointless he seems, shouting from the sidelines.
Chances are, you'll also
need to find a partner with shared values — a whopping 99 per
cent of singles in the survey
voted these in as a vital part
of a healthy relationship, along with a sense
of humour (an important factor for 97 per
cent off singles) and appearance (important to 92 per
cent).
The teaching union will support a walk out on Tuesday 5 July, after 91 per
cent of its members who
voted backed the action, claiming significant change was
needed.
Garry Gratton, president
of the South Okanagan board, saw the
voting day as one
of «highs and lows» with his membership surpassing the
needed 75 per
cent threshold and then seeing the initiative fail at the end.
The three boards that reached high thresholds numbers
needed: B.C. Northern Real Estate Board (75 per
cent needed and 89 per
cent of agents
voting were in favour); Real Estate Board
of Greater Vancouver (REBGV)(67 per
cent needed and 69 per
cent of votes in favour); and South Okanagan Real Estate Board (75 per
cent needed and 79 per
cent of those
voting favoured a merger).