| Term | Definition |
| the principle of "jus sanguini" confers citizenship by blood rather than place of birth | true |
| abolishing the electoral college would probably break the lock that our two parties have on the presidential electoral system | true |
| under the present voting rights act, a person must prove his literacy to vote | false |
| a state may require a statement of belief in the extistence of God as a qualification for holding an office or voting | false |
| in no case in recent times have any presidential electors ignored the popular vote of their state and cast their electoral vote independently | false |
| people who get welfare are more likely to vote than people who get social security | false |
| american citizen voting in a foreign political election automatically revokes his citizenship | false |
| members of congress and bureau cheifs need info that is hard to fin and expensive to collect but is often available from interest groups | true |
| conviction by a court-marshall or desertion in time of war automatically results in loss of citizenship | false |
| each of the fifty states uses primary elections to select concention delegates | false |
| minor parties in the us are often a powerful minority in Congress | false |
| the us constitution deals with political parties by saying nothing about them | true |