Public Opinion
Voting Behavior
Elections
Interest Groups
Media
100

Polls can be biased when the survey questions include complicated language. This type of bias is often referred to as...

Measurement error

100

This voting reform changed the nature of political competition. The reform made it much more difficult for parties to exchange favors for votes because it left no legal way for the parties to know if voters kept their side of the bargain.

Australian ballot

100

These compel government leaders to take the public’s opinion into account if they want to keep their jobs

Elections

100

When the National Rifle Association wants to prevent new restrictions on firearms, its members shower Congress with letters, e-mails, faxes, and phone calls.

Grassroots

100

President Franklin Roosevelt used radio to give these addresses to calm Americans during the Great Depression and World War II

Fireside chats

200

V.O. Key describes this as "“those opinions held by private persons which governments find it prudent to heed”"

Public opinion

200

The most important factors that influence whether people vote

Age and education

200

Assume a state has six representatives in the House. If so, that state has this many electoral votes in the Electoral College.

8

200

An interest group advocating parental rights in education provides stickers and a magazine to those who pay its membership fee. These stickers and magazines are examples of this type of incentive.

Selective

200

The equal access provision of this policy required stations to provide equal time to candidates for office

The Fairness Doctrine

300

The process of acquiring political attitudes

Political socialization

300

This law explains why in a system in which a single winner is chosen by plurality voting, serious competitors will be reduced to two

Duverger's Law

300

Their pro-British leanings put this political party on the wrong side of the War of 1812

The Federalists

300

A member of Congress receives three-thousand letters with the exact same text, supposedly signed by different people, all advocating she vote for a piece of legislation.

Astroturf

300

A headline in a newspaper from 1891 reads “Scandal in Bangor! Mayor Caught Taking Bribes for Bridge Project while Mistress Profits as Well”.

Yellow journalism

400

This identity shapes opinions and organizes other political attitudes most consistently for most Americans

Political party

400

According to Anthony Downs’s calculus of voting, an individual’s decision whether or not to vote is based on the following formula: R = BP – C. These letters represent...

R - Expected utility from voting, 

B - Utility from preferred candidate’s victory, 

P - Probability of casting the deciding vote, 

C - Cost of voting

400

This led to the unraveling of the New Deal coalition of Democrats

The Civil Rights Movement

400

Appeals from citizens and groups to legislators for favorable policies and decisions

Lobbying

400

The adaptation of what technology "democratized" newspaper printing by allowing them to increase their reading audience? 

The penny press (or steam power)

500

This term is used to describe elaborately organized sets of political attitudes

Ideologies

500

The D term was added to the calculus of voting formula to explain how, in some cases, voting is rational. The D term stands for this in the updated formula, R = BP – C + D.

Expressive benefit of voting

500

Political needs provoked by the Vietnam War as youth argued if they were old enough to die, they were old enough to vote led to this amendment.

26th Amendment

500

“I know it was silly to spend an entire day volunteering to hand out flyers to get the public to support the American Medical Association’s efforts to make flu vaccines free nationwide, but it was a good cause and I’m happy I did it.” With this sentence, the speaker is extolling this incentive of interest group participation.

Moral

500

Organizations that base the majority of their content on the work of trained reporters

Legacy outlets

M
e
n
u