Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. State Railroad Director South Dakota Republican Party Executive Director U.S. House: Biola University . University of South Dakota . January 3, 2005 2028 Class 3 Sioux Falls: Mike Rounds: Republican October 24, 1954 (age 69) Businessman Governor of South Dakota South Dakota Senate: South Dakota State University : January 3, 2015 2026 Class 2

  2. Republican Party, or GOP (Grand Old Party), One of two major U.S. political parties. It was formed in 1854 by former members of the Whig, Democratic, and Free Soil parties who chose the party’s name to recall the Jeffersonian Republicans’ concern with the national interest above sectional interests and states’ rights.

  3. Republican Party (United States) Otu Republican Party, nke a na-akpọkwa GOP ("Grand Old Party"), bụ otu n'ime otu ndọrọ ndọrọ ọchịchị abụọ bụ isi na United States. E hiwere GOP na 1854 site n'aka ndị na-emegide ịgba ohu bụ ndị megidere iwu Kansas–Nebraska, nke nyere ohere maka mgbasawanye nke ịgba ohu chatel ...

  4. Blue shows states won by Clinton/Kaine. The 2016 United States presidential election was the 58th presidential election that happened on November 8, 2016. Businessman Donald Trump and Indiana governor Mike Pence, defeated former secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Virginia senator Tim Kaine on the Republican Party ticket.

  5. Map of relative party strengths in each U.S. state after the 2020 presidential election. Political party strength in U.S. states is the level of representation of the various political parties in the United States in each statewide elective office providing legislators to the state and to the U.S. Congress and electing the executives at the state (U.S. state governor) and national (U.S ...

  6. Map based on last Senate election in each state as of 2022. Starting with the 2000 United States presidential election, the terms "red state" and "blue state" have referred to U.S. states whose voters vote predominantly for one party — the Republican Party in red states and the Democratic Party in blue states — in presidential and other statewide elections.

  7. In 1870, the Fifteenth Amendment gave all men in the United States the right to vote, including ex-slaves. In 1913, the Seventeenth Amendment allowed the people to elect their own United States Senators (before this, the state legislatures had chosen U.S. Senators). The Nineteenth Amendment, passed in 1920, gave women the right to vote.