History, asked by dandreswanson, 1 year ago

What do most elections for local, state, and federal offices have in common? A. They are winner-takes-all elections. B. They elect officials who represent multimember districts. C. They involve electors who represent the people. D. They are administered by the federal government.

Answers

Answered by topanswers
17

The answer for your question is option (A)-They are winner-takes-all elections.

The winner-takes-all is an election system that is common in local, state and federal offices.

This is the election system in which a group or a single political party can be elected to every office within a state of a district.

There are many electoral system like Winner-takes-all system. They are

  • Single-winner district system
  • Bloc voting
  • Numbered-Post system.
Answered by Arslankincsem
8

The feature that most elections for local, state and federal elections have in common from among "they are winner-takes-all elections", "They elect officials who represent multimember districts", "They involve electors who represent the people" and "They are administered by the federal government."is they involve electors who represent the people.


There are elected offices at each level consisting of at least a Legislature and an elected Governor.

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