The answer is: state party leaders
Qin Shi Huang, born as Ying Zheng in 259 BC, was the son of the king of the Qin State. At the age of thirteen, he succeeded his father's regality. Ying Zheng was very aggressive and ambitious at an early age. He assumed full power at 22 by ridding himself of his premier, Lu Buwei, who acted as regent while he was a minor. He wanted to unify and subjugate all the states like Han, Zhao, Wei, Chu, Yan and Qi by the powerful political, economic and military strength of the Qin State. Ying Zheng realized his ambition and built the first feudal and centralized empire in Chinese history in 221 BC. This was what we called - the Qin Dynasty (221 BC - 206 BC). Ying Zheng was the first emperor of a united China, so he proclaimed himself Qin Shi Huang.
If two-thirds of eligible voters showed up to vote in 2012, it was not a problem per se.
In every election, the number of voter turnout depends on a number of factors including, the candidates themselves, their political views and how it can impact the local community, the general interest of the voters in relation to the 'competitiveness' of the vote and the local demographics, since more educated people usually vote more often.
The national turnout for elections was 41.8% in 2012 which means New Mexico actually performed better than the national average.
However, it should be a cause of concern for both political parties if the trend begins downwards and less and less people eventually show up to vote.
This actually happened in New Mexico where the recent voter turn out in 2016 was approx. 50%, way down from two-thirds.
This is a problem since representation decreases and it becomes difficult to actually elect a government that works for the local people
Answer:
C.The yellow river allowed settlements to have room to grow
Explanation: