Congress & Lawmaking
Presidential Power
Checks & Balances
SCOTUS Cases
Foundational Documents
100

Which chamber is determined by proportional representation and has more members?

Challenge: Why is debate more structured here?

House of Representatives

100

What is a veto?

Challenge: How does Congress override it?

President rejecting a law
100

Which branch confirms federal judges?

Challenge: How is this a check?

Legislative (Senate)

100

This case ruled that students can protest as long as it does not disrupt school - which includes wearing armbands to protest the Vietnam War.
Challenge: What constitutional clause is involved

What is Tinker v Des Moines
100
This foundational document discusses the greatest threat to a republic - factions

Challenge: What are factions?

What is Federalist 10

200
This is what senators enact when delaying a bill through extended debate


Challenge: How is it stopped?

What is a filibuster?

200

What is an executive order?

Challenge: Who checks it?

Directive from president with force of law without Congressional process

200

This is defined as the power to declare laws unconstitutional

Challenge: Which SCOTUS case established this?

What is judicial review?

200

Baker v Carr establied what rule

Challenge: What is the impact of this case?

One person, one vote

200

Which foundational document supports checks & balances?

Challenge: Explain this document's key idea

Federalist 51

300

Explain ONE role of congressional committees

Challenge: What makes them powerful?

Review, amend, and decide if bills move forward

300

What is the difference between formal and informal powers

Challenge: Give an example of each

Formal powers are in the Constitution

Informal powers are implied powers not in the Constitution 

300

What is ONE way Congress checks the President?

Challenge: Explain how it limits the President

Overriding vetoes

Impeachment

Budget control/approval

Confirming Presidential appointments

300

Shaw v Reno ruled one restriction on redistricting

Challenge: Which constitutional amendment was involved

Districts cannot be drawn based primarily on race

300
What is the main argument made in Federalist 70?

Challenge: Name one pro and one con

A strong, single executive is best
400

Identify the congressional process that is used by both chambers to resolve differences in bills:

Challenge: How does bicameralism contribute to this process

Conference committees - House & Senate meet before final passage

400
The President sends troops without declaring war. What role/power give the President this ability?

Challenge: What is the limit to this power?

Commander in Chief power

400

Congress passes a law limiting the types of cases that federal courts can hear.

Identify the power Congress is using AND explain how it acts as a check on the judiciary.

Power: Control of jurisdiction

Congress can define/lower federal court jurisdiction

Limits judicial power by restricting what cases courts can hear

400

Define stare decisis and how it influences SCOTUS decisions

Challenge: Which judicial philosophy follows precedent more

Following precedent set

Promotes stability and consistency in SCOTUS rulings

400

Explain how Federalist 10 argues that factions can actually protect democracy.

Challenge: How does this connect to pluralism

Many factions mean no single group dominates

Forces compromise and prevents tyranny

500

Explain how Congress uses its power over the federal budget to influence policy outcomes

Challenge: Explain discretionary vs mandatory spending

Congress controls taxation and spending (power of the purse)

Can fund or defund programs/agencies

Can shape policy priorities through appropriations

500

Explain how the president uses the bully pulpit to influence policy and describe ONE limitation of this power.

Challenge: How does this connect to informal powers

Using speeches/media to push agenda, shape public opinion, and pressure Congress

No formal authority, depends on public support, and Congress can ignore pressure

500

Explain ONE way each branch can check another branch

Challenge: Which foundational doc supports this

Congress → override veto / confirm appointments

President → veto legislation

Courts → judicial review

500

Explain how TWO features of the Supreme Court protect its independence AND describe ONE risk this creates.

Life tenure → no political pressure

No elections → insulated from public opinion

Risks - Can make unpopular decisions, May be seen as illegitimate

500

Explain ONE concern about the Constitution raised in Brutus 1 AND describe how Federalist 10 responds to that concern.

Brutus 1: Federal government too powerful → threatens states/rights

Federalist 10: Large republic + factions prevent tyranny

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