Constitution
The Presidency
Congress
Supreme Court
Elections & Political Parties
100

This document preceded the Constitution and created a weak national government.

What are the Articles of Confederation?

100

This is the minimum age requirement to become President.

What is 35 years old?

100

This chamber of Congress has 435 voting members.

What is the House of Representatives?

100

The Supreme Court currently has this many justices.

What is 9?

100

This group formally nominates a party's presidential candidate.

What is a national convention?

200

The first ten amendments are collectively known as this.
 

What is the Bill of Rights?

200

This amendment limits presidents to two elected terms.

What is the 22nd Amendment?

200

This chamber confirms presidential appointments.

What is the Senate?

200

This landmark case established judicial review.

What is Marbury v. Madison?

200

These elections determine party nominees for the general election.

Answer: What are primaries or caucuses?

300

This constitutional principle divides power between the national and state governments.

What is federalism?

300

This presidential power allows the rejection of legislation passed by Congress.

What is the veto?

300

The constitutional power to formally bring charges against a federal official is called this.

What is impeachment?

300

This Chief Justice wrote the majority opinion in Marbury v. Madison.

Who was John Marshall?

300

This institution officially elects the President.

What is the Electoral College?

400

This clause in Article VI establishes that federal law is the "supreme law of the land."

What is the Supremacy Clause?

400

This presidential action has the force of law but does not require congressional approval.

What is an executive order?

400

This congressional committee reconciles differences between House and Senate versions of a bill.

What is a conference committee?

400

This case established that segregated schools was unconstitutional.
 

Brown v. Board of Education

400

This occurs when voters support candidates from different parties for different offices.

What is split-ticket voting?

500

This amendment reserved powers not delegated to the federal government to the states or the people.

What is the Tenth Amendment?

500

This scandal led to the resignation of President Richard Nixon.

What is Watergate?

500

This procedure allows senators to delay or block legislation through extended debate.

What is a filibuster?

500

This case established that students do not "shed their constitutional rights at the schoolhouse gate."

What is Tinker v. Des Moines?

500

This person is credited with founding the Democratic Republican Party.

Who is Thomas Jefferson or James Madison?
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