Which preposition to use with voter

of Occurrences 55%

P.S.Since the above was set up in type, MR. PUNCHINELLO has learned that the Canton in which this occurrence took place is not in China, but is a thriving village in Norfolk county, Massachusetts, about eighteen miles from Boston, and that the assailants were consequently not pig-tailed heathen, but genuine Christian children, who, in a few years, will belong to the cultivated voters of Massachusetts.

in Occurrences 54%

We have a more lively hope for charming Italy when we find even a single citizen exhibiting a skill which would do honor to the most accomplished professional voter in New York.

at Occurrences 11%

There was a great inrush of voters at the polling-booth, friendly votes, if I may call them sovotes, I mean to say, of honest supporters; these were my acquaintances made during my sojourn at Barnstaple; others came, a few for Cave as well as myself.

to Occurrences 8%

To obviate the great expenses to which candidates were exposed in bringing voters to the polls (amounting to £150,000 in Yorkshire alone), the bill provided that the poll should be taken in different districts, and should be closed in two days in the towns, and in three days in the counties.

for Occurrences 7%

A happy thought to prepare the new voters for taking the plunge.

as Occurrences 5%

In the United States this college which elects the President is elected on the same register of voters as that which elects the Senate and Congress, and at the same time.

by Occurrences 4%

But in the meantime the people of the United States believe that, as a whole, the Senate and the House no longer represent the voters by whom they were elected, but the special interests by whom they are controlled.

into Occurrences 3%

This is done sometimes by throwing the greatest possible number of hostile voters into a district which is anyhow certain to be hostile, sometimes by adding to a district where parties are equally divided some place in which the majority of friendly voters is sufficient to turn the scale.

from Occurrences 3%

Or, sometimes he apologizes beforehand, saying: 'I've got to hand out some hot shot to you fellows just to please a crowd of sovereign voters from my district who have come up to Washington to see me perform.

against Occurrences 2%

Afterwards, you rallied voters against it.

behind Occurrences 2%

Thus the great Socialist-International-Pacifist movement, with four and a quarter million German voters behind it, fizzled out on the pavements of Unter den Linden.

on Occurrences 2%

President Hadley well said that "the fundamental division of powers in the Constitution of the United States is between voters on the one hand and property-owners on the other."

out Occurrences 2%

To this chamber the ministers were admitted, as well as to the Chamber of Deputies, the members of which were elected by about one hundred thousand voters out of thirty millions of people.

under Occurrences 2%

We may take for illustration the commonest, simplest casethe case that is the perplexity of every clear-thinking voter under British or American

with Occurrences 2%

It told me that I must not "threaten a voter with any consequence whatever."

through Occurrences 1%

Both those facts are of first-rate political importance in those great modern communities in which all the events which stimulate political action reach the voters through newspapers.

throughout Occurrences 1%

His journeys as a surveyor had brought him into touch with, and into the confidence of, enough voters throughout the county to secure the needed majority.

during Occurrences 1%

By the privilege granted to any and all friends of the constitution of bringing into their meetings the names of voters during the three following days 5,000 votes more were obtained, making an aggregate of about 14,000 votes.

down Occurrences 1%

I never had any such trouble In registering voters down South, I set every nigger down double And put the whites down in the mouth.

before Occurrences 1%

A voter who declares to the presiding official (under oath, if required) that he was a voter before May 1, 1857, and cannot read, or that he is blind or physically unable to mark his ballot, can receive the assistance of one or two of the election officers in the marking of his ballot.

within Occurrences 1%

Each state, as has previously been stated, prescribes the qualifications of voters within its borders.

Which preposition to use with  voter