Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
2010 Nevada Senate General Election: All Head-to-Head Matchups graph of multiple polls from Pollster.com; 2010 Nevada Senate Race from Real Clear Politics; 2010 Nevada Senate Race from CQ Politics; Election 2010 from Vegas PBS; Debates. Nevada Primary Senate Candidates Debate, C-SPAN, May 18, 2010; Official campaign sites. Sharron Angle for U.S ...
Candidates for Nevada State Offices at Project Vote Smart; Nevada Polls at Pollster.com; Nevada Congressional Races in 2010 campaign finance data from OpenSecrets; Nevada 2010 campaign finance data from Follow the Money; Election 2010 from Vegas PBS; Imagine Election - Find out which candidates will appear on your ballot - search by address or ...
If the "None of These Candidates" option receives the most votes in an election, then the actual candidate who receives the most votes still wins the election. This has most notably happened on two occasions: in the 1976 Republican primary for Nevada's At-large congressional district , None of These Candidates received 16,097 votes, while ...
Nevada voters in the state-run primary had a choice to reject all the candidates on the ballot, and they did just that — with more people choosing to vote for “none of these candidates” than ...
The 2010 Nevada gubernatorial election was held on Tuesday, November 2, 2010, to elect the governor of Nevada, who would serve a four-year term to begin on January 3, 2011. Despite speculation that incumbent Republican governor Jim Gibbons would not run for a second term due to low approval ratings, he ran for re-election.
Polls closed at 10 p.m. ET Tuesday in Nevada, where Republicans voted in an unusual primary election: "None of These Candidates" was a choice on the ballot and Republican front-runner Donald Trump ...
The Nevada secretary of state reported that just 3,800 Nevadans showed up at the polls in the first three hours of voting Tuesday, as President Joe Biden faces only nominal opposition in the ...
The 2010 House elections in Nevada occurred on November 2, 2010, to elect the members of the State of Nevada's delegation to the United States House of Representatives. Representatives are elected for two-year terms; the elected served in the 112th Congress from January 3, 2011, until January 3, 2013.