A is wrong. One of F and G votes for the tax bill (because H is against), and one has to vote against it (because only one councillor supports the tax bill.)
B is wrong. G is against the recreation bill. Two people vote for recreation, so H has to vote for it.
C is wrong. Exactly one person votes for the school bill. F is already against it. So one of G and H votes for it and one against it.
D is CORRECT. It could be true as the following diagram shows:
Two people are for recreation, one is for taxes and one is for schools.
E is wrong. It says F and G vote for two bills each. If we add the one bill R definitely supports, that’s five votes in favor of bills. That’s one too many.
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