An election is a process in which people vote to decide the leader of the country or to decide any issue. The United State is a representative democracy, in which the adult citizens of the country vote to elect the country’s leaders. These elected leaders make the governmental decisions. The leader serve in the office for a specific amount of time called a term of office.
Elections are done to make a person, the leader of the country, who is eligible for this job. A person who can handle provincial disputes, regional disputes, can listen to both rich and poor, is able to answer for what he is doing in country, able to make his country successful; he should be liberal and is able to make a democratic state where each person has equal rights and they have freedom to speak and can give ideas about how to run the country.
Elections to Surrey County Council are important for everyone who lives in the country. The United States presidential elections of 2012 are the next United States presidential elections to be held on Tuesday, November 6, 2012. It will be the 57th quadrennial elections in which presidential electors, who will actually elect the president and the vice president of the United States on December 17, 2012, will be chosen. Barrack Obama, who is eligible for second and final term as president, has announced that he will seek nomination to the Democratic Party’s candidate in this election.
The 2012 presidential election will coincide with the United States senate elections where 33 races will be occurring as well as the united states House of Representatives elections to elect the members for the 113th congress. The elections will also encompass eleven gubernatorial races as well as state legislature races.
The 2010 census changed the Electoral College vote apportionment for the presidential elections from 2012 to 2020. The following candidates have stated they do not plan to run in 2012 presidential elections. However, some candidates is past elections have denied intentions to run and later entered to those races.
1. Secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton of New York: has definitively ruled out running for president in 2012.
2. Former governor Howard Dean of Vermont: A spokesperson said: “no way, no how, not happening” when asked if dean would challenge president Obama in the primaries, adding, “he asked me to make it explicitly clear”. He supports president Obama and will support him in 2012.
3. Former senator Russ Feingold of Wisconsin: Feingold’s chief of staff replied to speculation that he would run by saying, “senator Feingold is not running for president in 2012. Any suggestion he is thinking of running, planning to run or interested in running is untrue. Senator Feingold is a strong supporter of president obama and wants to see him reelected in 2012.
4. Representative Dennis Kucinich of Ohio: responding to speculation that he might run against president obama in the 2012 democratic presidential primaries, Kucinich stated in August 2010 that he would not do so.