Asked by k

A 3-column table with 5 rows. The first column is labeled State with entries Florida, Michigan, New York, California, Texas. The second column is labeled Republican Primary with entries 12.8%, 16.5%, 1.4%, 22.9%, 12.8%. The third column is labeled General Election with entries 63.5%, 64.7%, 53.1%, 55.2%, 49.7%.
Look at the table.

What information is missing from the table that could help someone draw the most accurate conclusion about voter turnout in primaries and general elections?

the year in which this election took place
the candidates running for President
the percentage of Democratic primary voters
the states of New Jersey and Arizona

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
the percentage of Democratic primary voters

Reason: the table gives only Republican primary figures, so you can't compare overall primary turnout to the general election without Democratic primary turnout (or total primary turnout). The year and candidates also matter but are less directly missing from the table than the absent Democratic-primary percentages; adding New Jersey and Arizona isn't necessary to interpret the five states shown.