Not exact matches
The 2008 election saw the lowest
voter turnout in Alberta's history, with only 41 percent
of eligible voters casting a ballot (CBC.ca, 2008).
Less than half the state's
eligible voters bother to register, but Mormons almost always do, which gives them about a quarter
of the likely
turnout.»
I'm looking for a full sortable list
of the results, for every constituency, ideally with as much information as possible:
Turnout, #
eligible voters, votes for each candidate (both # and %), winning majority (both # and %), etc..
McDonald used voting -
eligible population (VEP), or the number
of eligible voters independent
of their current registration status, to calculate
turnout rates in each state on November 4.
Political scientist Michael McDonald's United States Elections Project studied
voter turnout in the 2014 election by looking at the percentage
of eligible voters who headed to the polls.
In 2004, as an accession country, Slovakia recorded the lowest
turnout in the history
of the European elections (just 17 %
of eligible voters).
Slightly over half
of eligible Labor Party primary
voters cast ballots in the party's leadership primaries by the time polls closed at 10 p.m. Thursday, already leading to worries in Yachimovich's camp that the low
turnout could unseat her.
About 15 percent
of eligible voters participated in the 2012 primary and Greenberg said he expects a similar
turnout Tuesday.
Turnout was lowest in New Fairfield, with fewer than 300
of the nearly 3,000
eligible voters showing up at the polls.
But
turnout in community school board elections was very low, usually well below 10 percent
of eligible voters, giving groups like the teachers» union outsize sway.
In 2010, New York ranked last in the nation for
voter turnout, with only 32 percent
of the 13.4 million
eligible voters actually exercising their constitutional right.
Fewer than 7 percent
of eligible Nassau
voters participated in the 2014 primary, and
turnout fell to about 3 percent in last year's district attorney primary.
Congressional races draw a significantly smaller percentage
of eligible voters to the polls (and New York already ranks among the 10 states with the worst
voter turnout), but the consequences
of ignoring them can have a ripple effect.
2015 saw another year
of record low
voter turnout throughout much
of New York, with the vast majority
of eligible voters casting a vote against duopoly, corporate politics by refusing to participate at all.
The 2014 election had the worst
voter turnout in 72 years, with less than one - third
of the
eligible voting population going to the polls.
In 2004, just over 60 per cent
of eligible voters cast a ballot, but this was the highest
turnout since 1968.
Just 20 percent
of eligible Los Angeles
voters turned out to the polls on March 7 to vote for their city's next mayor and school board officials, and
turnout is likely to be even lower for Tuesday's school board runoffs.
The
voter turnout was 61.1 %
of eligible voters.
Note that the previously released official
voter turnout of 68.3 % nationally reflects
turnout among registered
voters, rather than
eligible voters
Only 34 per cent
of eligible voters cast their votes in this election, even less than the 37 per cent
voter turnout in the 2011 election.
Today also brought news that
voter turnout is trending LOWER than in 2011, as a percentage
of eligible voters and even in raw numbers.