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Social Science
Political Science
Politics of the United States
ap government review crash course key terms
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Terms in this set (88)
Majority Rule
A fundamental democratic principle requiring that the majority's view be respected. Nonetheless, the Constitution originally contained a number of provisions designed to limit majority rule, including electoral college, life tenure for Supreme Court justices, and the selection of senators by state legislators.
Checks and Balances
System in which each branch of government can limit the power of the other two branches. For example, the Senate has the power to approve or reject presidential appointments to the Supreme Court.
Unitary System
System of government in which all power is invested in a central government.
Federalism
A system of government in which power is divided by a written constitution between a central government and regional governments. As a result, two or more levels of government have formal authority over the same geographic area and people.
Expressed Powers
Powers specifically granted to the federal government by the Constitution. For example, the Constitution gives Congress the power to coin money, impose taxes. and regulate interstate commerce. Also known as enumerated powers.
Implied Powers
Powers of the federal government that go beyond those enumerated in the Constitution. They are derived from the elastic or necessary and proper clause.
Reserved Powers
Powers not specifically granted to the national government or denied to the states. These powers are held by states through the Tenth Amendment. Also known as police powers.
Cooperative Federalism
Situations in which the national and state governments work together to complete projects. Also called fiscal federalism.
Categorical Grant
Funds provided for a specific and clearly defined purpose.
Block Grant
Funds granted to the states for a broadly defined purpose. Because these shift resources from the federal government to the states , they contribute to the growing number of state and local government employees.
Mandates
Rules telling states what they must do to comply with federal guidelines. Unfunded (blank) require state and local governments to provide services or comply with regulations without the provision of funds.
Devolution
A movement to transfer the responsibilities of governing from the federal government to state and local government.
Political Culture
A set of widely shared political beliefs and values. For example, America's (blank) is characterized by strong support for individual liberty, political equality, legal equality, the rule of law, and limited government.
Political Socialization
The process by which political values are formed and passed from one generation to the next. The family is the most important agent of this.
Public Opinion
Attitudes about institutions, leaders, political issues, and events.
Political Ideology
A cohesive set of beliefs about politics, public policy, and the role of government.
Political Efficacy
The belief that one's political participation makes a difference.
Split-Ticket voting
Voting for candidates of different parties for different offices in the same election. Recent elections have witnessed a significant increase in this concept as the number of voters who identify themselves as independents increases.
Political Party
A group of citizens who organize to win elections, hold public offices, operate governments and determine public policy.
Plurality Election
The winning candidate is the person who receives more votes than anyone else, but less than half the total.
Single-Member District
An electoral district from which one person is chosen by the voters for each elected office. This type of electoral system typically leads to legislatures being dominated by two political parties.
Party Era
A historical period dominated by one political party.
Critical Election
An election when significant groups of voters change their traditional patterns of party loyalty.
Party Realignment
The majority party is displaced by the minority party, thus ushering in a new party era. For example, in 1932, Franklin Delano Roosevelt (FDR) led the New Deal coalition of blue-collared workers, racial minorities, Southerners, and farm laborers to a sweeping electoral victory.
Divided Government
A government in which one party controls the presidency while another party controls Congress. The pattern of divided government has dominated U.S. politics since the early 1970s.
Interest Group
An organization of people whose members share views on specific interests and attempt to influence public policy to their benefit. Unlike political parties, these do not elect people to office.
Political Action Committee (PAC)
A committee formed by business, labor, or other interest groups to raise money and make contributions to the campaigns of political candidates whom they support.
Free Riders
People who benefit from an interest group without making any contributions. Labors unions and public interest groups often have this (blank) problem because people can benefit from the group's activities without joining.
Power Elite Theory
The theory that a small number of very wealthy individuals, powerful corporate interest groups, and large financial institutions dominate key policy areas.
Pluralist Theory
The theory that many interest groups compete for power in a large number of policy areas.
Hyperpluralist Theory
The theory that government policy is weakened and often contradictory because there are so many competing interest groups.
Mass Media
Means of communication such as newspapers, radio, television, and the internet that can reach large, widely dispersed audiences.
Linkage Institutions
Institutions that connect citizens to government. The mass media, interest groups, and political parties are the three main types.
Horse-Race Journalism
The tendency of the media to cover campaigns by emphasizing how candidates stand in the polls instead of where they stand on the issues.
Congressional Redsitricting
The reallocation of the number of representatives each state has in the House of Representatives.
Gerrymandering
The legislative process by which the majority party in each state legislature redraws congressional districts to ensure the maximum number of seats for its candidates.
Incumbent
An officeholder who is seeking reelection. It is the single most important factor in determining the outcome of congressional elections.
Franking Privilege
The right of members of Congress to mail newsletters to their constituents at the government's expense.
Standing Committees
Permanent subject-matter congressional committees that handle legislation and oversee the bureaucracy.
Conference Committees
Temporary bodies that are formed to resolve differences between the House and Senate versions of a bill.
House Rules Committee
This committee sets the guidelines for floor debate. It gives each bill a rule that places the bill on the legislative calendar, limits time for debate, and determines the type of amendments that will be allowed.
House Ways and Means Committee
House committee that handles tax bills.
Seniority
Unwritten rule in both houses of Congress reserving committee chairs to members of the committee with the longest records of continuous service.
Filibuster
A way of delaying or preventing action on a bill by using long speeches and unlimited debate to "talk a bill to death".
Cloture
A Senate motion to end a filibuster. Cloture requires a three-fifths vote.
Logrolling
Tactic of mutual aid and vote trading among legislators.
Oversight
Congressional review of the activities of an executive agency, department, or office.
Delegate Role of Representation
When members of Congress cast votes based on the wishes of their constituents.
Closed Primary
A primary in which voters are required to identify a party preference before the election and are not allowed to split their ticket.
Frontloading
The recent pattern of states holding primaries early in order to maximize their media attention and political influence. Three-fourths of the presidential primaries are now held between February and mid-March.
Soft Money
Contributions to political parties for party-building activities. Soft money contributions are used to circumvent limits on hard money.
527 Group
A tax-exempt organization created to influence the political process; these groups are not regulated by the Federal Election Commission because they do not coordinate their activities with a candidate or party.
Veto
The president's constitutional power to reject a bill passed by Congress. Congress may override the veto with a two-thirds vote in each chamber.
Line-Item veto
The power to veto specific dollar amounts or line items from major congressional spending bills. The Supreme Court struck down the line-item veto as an unconstitutional expansion of the president's veto power.
Executive Agreement
A pact between the president and a head of a foreign state. Executive agreements do not have to be approved by the Senate. However, unlike treaties, these are not part of U.S. law and are not binding on future presidents.
Executive privilege
The president's power to refuse to disclose confidential information. In United States v. Nixon (1974), the Supreme Court ruled that there is no constitutional guarantee of unqualified executive privilege.
Lame-Duck Period
The period of time in which the president's term is about to come to an end. Presidents typically have less influence during this period.
Bureaucracy
A large, complex organization of appointed officials.
Executive Order
A directive, order, or regulation issued by the president. They are based on constitutional or statutory authority and have the force of law.
Iron Triangle
An alliance among an administrative agency, an interest group, and a congressional committee. Each member of this provides key services, information, or policy for the others.
Issue Network
A network that includes policy experts, media pundits, congressional staff members and interest groups who regularly debate an issue.
Policy Agenda
A set of issues and problems that policy makers consider important. The mass media play an important role in influencing the issues which receive public attention.
Appellate Jurisdiction
The authority of a court to hear an appeal from a lower court.
Senatorial Courtesy
An unwritten tradition whereby the Senate will not confirm nominations for lower court positions that are opposed by a senator of the president's own party from the state in which the nominee is to serve.
Writ of Certiorari
An order by the Supreme Court directing a lower court to send up the record in a given case for its review.
Rule of Four
The Supreme Court will hear a case if four justices agree to do so.
Solicitor General
Responsible for handling all appeals on behalf of the United States government to the Supreme Court.
Amicus Curiae brief
A friend of the court brief filed by an interest group or interested party to influence a Supreme Court decision.
Stare Decisis
Latin phrase meaning "let the decision stand". The vast majority of Supreme Court decisions are based on precedents established in earlier cases.
Judicial Restraint
Philosophy that the Supreme Court should use precedent and the Framers' original intent to decide cases.
Judicial Activism
Philosophy that the Supreme Court must correct injustices when other branches of government or the states refuse to do so.
Monetary Policy
Involves regulating the money supply, controlling inflation, and adjusting interest rates. Controlled by the Federal Reserve Board.
Fiscal Policy
Raising and lowering taxes and government spending programs. Controlled by the executive and legislative branches.
Entitlement Programs
A government-sponsored program that provides mandated benefits to those who meet eligibility requirements. Social Security and Medicare are the government's largest of these programs.
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
Responsible for preparing the budget that the president submits to Congress.
Civil Liberties
Legal and constitutional rights that protect individuals from arbitrary acts of government. They include freedom of speech and guarantees of a fair trial.
Civil Rights
Policies designed to protect people against arbitrary or discriminatory treatment by government officials or individuals. They include laws prohibiting racial and gender discrimination.
Selective Incorporation
The case-by-case process by which liberties listed in the Bill of Rights have been applied to the states using the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Establishment Clause
A provision of the first amendment that prohibits Congress from establishing an official government-sponsored religion.
Free Exercise Clause
A provision of the first amendment that guarantees each person the right to believe what he or she wants. However, a religion cannot make an act legal that would otherwise be illegal.
Clear and Present Danger test
Judicial interpretation of the First Amendment that government may not ban speech unless it poses an imminent threat to society.
Writ of Habeas Corpus
A court order directing that a prisoner be brought before a court and that the court officers show cause why the prisoner should not be released.
Bill of Attainder
A legislative acts that provides for the punishment of a person without a court trial
Ex post facto law
A lot apply to an act committed before the law was enacted
Exclusionary rule
Supreme court guideline that prohibits evidence obtained by illegal searches or seizures from being admitted in court
Miranda Warnings
Mornings that police must read to suspects prior to questioning that advises them of their rights
Strict Scrutiny
Supreme Court rule that classification by race and ethnic background is inherently suspect and must be justified by a "compelling public interest."
Affirmative Action
A policy requiring federal agencies, universities, and most employers to take positive steps to remedy the effects of past discrimination.
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