Not exact matches
Data were collected via landline and cellular telephone surveys Feb. 24 - 26 among 600
registered voters, including 222 parents or guardians of children in K - 12 public or charter schools.
Trump's new election commission is seeking sensitive personal
data on every
registered voter in the country — including names, birth dates, party affiliations, and partial Social Security numbers — without any explanation for how it will be used or what security measures are being taken.
@DavidRicherby I agree, but I couldn't quickly find the
data for the number of
registered voters per state.
According to
data provided by the California Secretary of State, this is the breakdown of
voter registration by party for their roughly 225,000 people that
registered to vote:
It has stayed in G.O.P. control for decades and has a Republican enrollment advantage of more than 9,000
registered voters, according to
data with the state's Board of Elections.
In most, if not all, of these districts, Board of Elections
voter enrollment
data show
registered Democrats outnumbering
registered Republican
voters 4 - to - 1, or more in some cases.
Siena researchers compiled their
data by calling 772
registered voters.
In the off - year school - board elections for which I have
data, 1997 and 1999, the median turnout of
registered voters is 9 percent, as can be seen in Figure 1a.
The report from the Columbia Group, a network of seven Southern nonprofit organizations that includes the Public School Forum, also includes polling
data of
registered voters.
So theoretically, a cost / benefit analysis based on this
data would yield a conclusion that goes something like this: since there are more «pro-climate issues
voters» than ardent climate naysayer
voters — even amongst
registered Republican
voters — and politicians would come out on top if they vocalized a platform that included climate solutions.
And finally, what would Mark Zuckerberg, the presidential candidate, do with all the
data Facebook collects about its users who happen to be
registered American
voters?
There are lots of
data companies that can tell you who's
registered to vote, and there are lots of companies that compile consumer
data on those same
voters.
The latest Pew Research Center survey amalgamates (that's our word of the day) 257 surveys over 23 years about the political alignments of some 350,000 U.S.
registered voters, with important
data on...
In total, the personal information of potentially near all of America's 200 million
registered voters was exposed, including names, dates of birth, home addresses, phone numbers, and
voter registration details, as well as
data described as «modeled»
voter ethnicities and religions.