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・ Opinion polling for the United Kingdom European Union membership referendum
・ Opinion polling for the United Kingdom general election, 1997
・ Opinion polling for the United Kingdom general election, 2001
・ Opinion polling in the 2008 Austrian legislative election
・ Opinion polling in the 43rd Canadian federal election
・ Opinion polling in the Brazilian presidential election, 2010
・ Opinion polling in the Canadian federal election, 2004
・ Opinion polling in the Canadian federal election, 2006
・ Opinion polling in the Canadian federal election, 2008
・ Opinion polling in the Canadian federal election, 2011
・ Opinion polling in the Canadian federal election, 2015
・ Opinion polling in the Canadian federal election, 2015 by constituency
・ Opinion polling in the Finnish parliamentary election, 2011
・ Opinion polling in the Philippine presidential election, 2010
・ Opinion polling in the Philippine presidential election, 2016
Opinion polling in the Philippine Senate election, 2007
・ Opinion polling in the Philippine Senate election, 2010
・ Opinion polling in the Philippine Senate election, 2013
・ Opinion polling in the Philippine Senate election, 2016
・ Opinion polling in the Polish parliamentary election, 2011
・ Opinion polling in the Scottish Parliament election, 2007
・ Opinion polling in the Scottish Parliament election, 2011
・ Opinion polling in United Kingdom constituencies, 2010–15
・ Opinion polls about 9/11 conspiracy theories
・ Opinion polls before the Spanish general election, 2008
・ Opinion polls in Turkey
・ Opinion polls on the British national identity card
・ Opinion privilege
・ Opinion Research Center of Afghanistan
・ Opinion Research Corporation


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Opinion polling in the Philippine Senate election, 2007 : ウィキペディア英語版
Opinion polling in the Philippine Senate election, 2007
Opinion polling (locally known as "surveys") is carried out by two major polling firms: Social Weather Stations (SWS), and Pulse Asia, with a handful of minor polling firms.
The Philippines uses plurality-at-large voting for senate elections. A voter has up to 12 votes, with the twelve candidates with the highest number of votes being elected. Political parties produce tickets; if their slate fail to reach 12 members, they may recruit other candidates from other parties as guest candidates; these guest candidates are not obliged to follow the policies of the slates that adopted them. Each candidate may be a member of different slates.
A typical poll asks a person to name twelve persons one would vote for in the senate election. A pollster then ranks all candidates from highest to lowest; the candidates at the top 12 are deemed "safe", while those below the top 12 but whose margin of error is within the 12th placed candidate's figure are "statistically tied" with the 12th placed candidate. In this system, a pollster can determine how many seats each ticket can win since the entire country is a single at-large "district"; this is unlike polling in other countries not using proportional representation for elections in legislatures where while a poll may give how a party may perform in the national vote but the number of seats that could have won is otherwise distorted due to the way the districts are drawn or to local variations.
==Winning candidates==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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