Examples of voter fatigue in the following topics:
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- Many causes have been proposed for the decline in voting, including demographics, voter fatigue and voter suppression, among other things.
- Voter suppression instead attempts to reduce the number of voters who might vote against the candidate or proposition advocated by the suppressors.
- In the United States and most Latin American nations, voters must go through separate voter registration procedures before they are allowed to vote.
- In politics, voter fatigue is the apathy that the electorate can experience under certain circumstances, one of which could be (in exceptional circumstances) that they are required to vote too often.
- Voter fatigue and voter apathy should be distinguished from what arises when voters are not allowed or unable to vote, or when disenfranchisement occurs.
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- High voter turnout is often considered to be desirable, though among political scientists and economists specialising in public choice, the issue is still debated.
- In developed countries, non-voters tend to be concentrated in particular demographic and socioeconomic groups, especially the young and the poor.
- Voter turnout varies considerably between countries.
- Voters lining up outside a Baghdad polling station during the 2005 Iraqi election.
- Voter turnout was considered high despite widespread concerns of violence.
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- In 1993, Congress passed the National Voter Registration Act of 1993, also known as the "motor voter" law, allowing citizens to register at motor vehicle and social service offices.
- "Motor voter's" success in increasing the ranks of registered voters differs by state depending on how well the program is publicized and executed.
- Voter registration also has increased as a result of online registration.
- RTV registered over 2 million new voters in 1992, 80% of whom cast a ballot, and signed up over 2.5 million voters in 2008.
- Voter turnout in presidential elections is generally higher than for lower-level contests; usually more than half the eligible voters cast a ballot .
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- Due to a decrease in party identification, the personal traits of candidates have become an influential factor in voters' decisions.
- The personal traits of candidates have become an influential factor in voters' decisions during recent elections.
- Issue voting can also be problematic when candidates' stances differ drastically from those of voters.
- Many candidates utilize demographic factors to appeal to voters.
- Other candidates appeal to voters through shared religious affiliations.
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- In "issue voting," voters cast their vote based primarily on specific political issues .
- A voter does not need to have an in-depth understanding of every issue or know how a candidate stands on every issue, rather a voter should have a sense of which candidate he or she agrees with the most.
- Voters use many different tactics to rationalize their view on a particular issue.
- Voters must often settle for the candidate whose stances are closest to their own.
- Some voters cast their ballots according to specific policy issues, for example, education reform.
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- Voter turnout varies considerably between countries.
- Voter turnout is the percentage of eligible voters who cast a ballot in an election.
- There are difficulties in measuring both the numerator, the number of voters who cast votes, and the denominator, the number of voters eligible to vote.
- Not all voters who arrive at the polls necessarily cast ballots.
- Voter turnout varies considerably between countries.
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- On average, Latino citizens continue to vote at significantly lower rates than non-Latino white voters.
- Latino voters are a diverse group which include long-established Tejano and Californio, Puerto Rican and Chicano voters, as well as the Cuban-American community which makes up a large bloc of voters in Miami.
- While Latino voters should not be thought of as a homogenous group, there are still some general trends for the group.
- On average Latino citizens continue to vote at significantly lower rates that non-Latino white voters.
- They are also encouraging the political participation of Latino residents through voter registration drives, and partnerships with other organizations, such as unions, that have traditionally been involved in voter mobilization.
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- Each voter uses one ballot, and ballots are not shared.
- The voter casts his or her ballot in a box at a polling station.
- Ranked ballots allow voters to rank candidates in order of preference, while ballots for first-past-the-post systems only allow voters to select one candidate for each position.
- The key aim is to ensure that the voter records a sincere choice by forestalling attempts to influence the voter by intimidation or bribery.
- Before the secret ballot was introduced, voter intimidation was commonplace.
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- Institutional factors have a significant impact on voter turnout.
- Compulsory voting ensures a large voter turnout.
- Any compulsion affects the freedom of an individual, and the fining of recalcitrant non-voters is an additional impact on a potential recalcitrant voter.
- In the United States and most Latin American nations, voters must go through separate voter registration procedures before they are allowed to vote.
- lowering the average time voters have to spend waiting in lines
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- The significance of voter turnout, the percentage of eligible voters who cast a ballot in an election, has been debated by scholars.
- Voter turnout is the percentage of eligible voters who cast a ballot in an election.
- After increasing for many decades, there has been a trend of decreasing voter turnout in most established democracies since the 1960s.
- Certain factors are leading to the decrease in the number of voters such as disenchantment, indifference, or contentment.
- Graph of Voter turnout in the United States presidential elections from 1824 to 2008.