Behave, Voters!
Party Time
How Interesting
Proper Gandas
The Show Goes On
100

This amendment grants citizenship to all persons born or naturalized in the United States.

What is the 14th Amendment?

100

Channels that allow individuals to communicate their preferences to policymakers.

What are linkage institutions?

100

Examples of this type of interest group include AFL-CIO, AARP, and One Million Moms.

What are membership groups?

100

Election coverage that focuses on polling and public perception of candidates rather than policies or ideas.

What is horse race journalism?

100

The current officeholder, who has an advantage when seeking reelection.

What is Incumbent?

200

This amendment changed the election of U.S. senators from state legislatures to a direct vote by the people.

What is the 17th amendment?

200

An official list of principles, goals, and strategies that a party believes in and will implement if elected to office.

What is a political platform?

200

Examples of this type of interest group include the American Bar Association and the American Medical Association.

What are expert groups?

200

Emotionally appealing words that sound nice but have no supporting arguments or substance.

What are glittering generalities?

200

The formula for how many Electoral Votes each state receives in the Electoral College.

What is #Senators + #Representatives?

300

The 24th amendment eliminated this practice, which served as a barrier to voting during the Jim Crow era.

What are poll taxes?

300

A person's views on their own ability to make a difference by voting in an election.

What is political efficacy?

300

Individuals who benefit from the work of an interest group without providing support.

What are free riders?

300

Misrepresenting an opponent's position in order to refute it without engaging the true issue.

What is a straw man?

300

A hired professional who assists with strategy, marketing, polling, and other campaign tasks.

What is a political consultant?

400

When an individual is loyal to a party and votes for their candidates regardless of who or what they stand for in the election.

What is party-line voting? (or straight ticket voting)

400

Any registered voter can request a ballot and vote in the election to choose a party's nominee.

What is an open primary?

400


What are insurgent groups?

400

The words represented by the abbreviation PAC.

What are Political, Action, Committee?
400

The number of Electoral Votes needed to secure a majority and win the election.

What is 270?

500

When individuals decide who to support based on predictions about how the candidate will perform in the future.

What is prospective voting?

500

Once used to select the nominee, now a ceremonial event at which the party announces which candidate has won the primaries to represent that party.

What is a party convention?

500

The Supreme Court case that struck down limits on campaign spending by corporations and interest groups, using the principle of free speech.

What is Citizens United v. FEC?

500

The 2002 law that attempted to reduce attack ads by limiting corporate spending and requiring a message from the candidate at the end of each ad.

What is the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act?

500

The two states that award their Electoral Votes proportionally, rather than using the winner-take-all method.

What are Maine and Nebraska?

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