The answer is <u>D. Elections are often decided by only a few voters.</u>
This is the best answer because this argument set the basis to explain the importance of every person's vote in a democratic government. Although one's vote might seem like it doesn't make a difference, it actually does, the election results are made of all the persons who relied on the voting system to express their political preference and make a difference. This is true especially in elections when candidates are strong because the elections tend to be decided by only a small difference (a few voters),
Besides, option A is incorrect because voting doesn't aim to symbolize an act, but to choose a leader who will express him/her ideology through the creation of policies that will determine a country's present and future.
Voting isn't less important than other types of civic engagement, it's equally important, if not more.
And voting is not mandatory by law, is a right guaranteed in the constitution that we all have as citizens, but it's not necessarily mandatory.
1 should be right because empiricism<span> is a theory that all knowledge is derived from sense-experience. </span>
The amendment process to the U.S. Constitution reflects the principle of <span>Federalism because it requires support from state and national governments </span>
Answer: TRUE
Explanation:
Yes they are guaranteed by the United States Constitution and further guaranteed by the civil rights laws are passed in the 1950s and 60s as well as the civil rights act that was passed in the 1960s
(Civil rights act of 1964)