Election Process
Voting Rights and Voter Behavior
Money in Politics
Electoral College Logic
Economy and State Government
100

This comes right after primaries and caucuses, when a party officially confirms its presidential ticket.

What is the national convention?

100

This amendment banned poll taxes in federal elections.

What is the 24th Amendment?

100

This was the major scandal that helped push Congress toward stronger campaign finance reforms in the 1970s.

What is Watergate?

100

This is the official vote cast by electors, not by ordinary citizens at the polling place.

What is the electoral vote?

100

This happens when demand is greater than supply at a given price.

What is a shortage?

200

Put these in order from earliest to latest: national convention, Electoral College vote, primaries and caucuses, congressional count.

What is primaries and caucuses, national convention, Electoral College vote, congressional count?

200

This amendment expanded voting rights by prohibiting denial of the vote based on race.

What is the 15th Amendment?

200

This 2002 law is also known as McCain-Feingold.

What is the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act?

200

In most states, the candidate who wins the statewide popular vote receives all of the state’s electoral votes under this rule.

What is winner-take-all?

200

This Federal Reserve tool involves buying or selling government securities.

What are open market operations?

300

Why do primaries and caucuses matter in the election process?

What is they help parties choose their nominees?

300

This federal law was especially important because it strengthened enforcement against racial discrimination in voting.

What is the Voting Rights Act of 1965?

300

This rule from BCRA requires candidates in ads to state that they approved the message.

What is the stand by your ad rule?

300

This office is chosen by the House if no presidential candidate gets an electoral majority.

What is the president?

300

This is the total amount the government owes over time, not one single year of overspending.

What is the national debt?

400

This is the final campaign stage before voters go to the polls in November.

What is the general election campaign?

400

A voter chooses the candidate they believe will best protect their own job, taxes, or financial situation. This is this type of voting.

What is rational choice voting?

400

This Supreme Court case said candidates may spend unlimited amounts of their own money on their campaigns.

What is Buckley v. Valeo?

400

Each state’s number of electors is based on its representation in these two parts of Congress.

What are the House of Representatives and the Senate?

400

This process allows voters to try to remove an elected official before the end of the term.

What is recall?

500

A candidate wins many safe states by huge margins but still loses because they fail to win enough competitive states. This shows the importance of this kind of strategy.

What is winning electoral votes, not only running up the popular vote?

500

This amendment gave Washington, D.C. electoral votes in presidential elections.

What is the 23rd Amendment?

500

This Supreme Court case struck down aggregate limits on how much one donor could give across many federal candidates and committees.

What is McCutcheon v. FEC?

500

This feature of presidential elections helps explain why campaigns often ignore states that are safely Democratic or safely Republican.

What is the Electoral College’s focus on competitive states?

500

This official is responsible for state funds and money management.

Who is the treasurer?

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