Two Chambers
Court Cases
Readings
Processes
Vocab
100

Name the two chambers of Congress

House of Representatives and Senate

100

Marbury v. Madison established the doctrine of

Judicial review

100

Which branch did Alexander Hamilton believe was the weakest?

Judicial Branch

100

What is the process for an amendment to be ratified in the Constitution?

2/3s of Congress, 3/4s of states

100

A President rejecting a passed piece of legislation is a

Veto

200

The chamber where bills of revenue begin in is the

House of Representatives

200

The Constitutional clause associated with Wisconsin v. Yoder is the

Free Exercise Clause

200

Which two Constitutional clauses did Brutus have the most problems with?

Supremacy Clause

Necessary and Proper Clause

200

The section of the federal budget that is set in place by law, and cannot change from year to year except in cases of reconciliation, is called

Mandatory spending

200

The extension of the Executive Branch comprising the President's Cabinet and independent regulatory agencies is the

Bureaucracy

300
Congress can hold hearings in case there are scandals that arise within the Executive. This is called

- Congressional oversight

- Checks and balances

- Political accountability

300

The Equal Protection Clause has been used in the two court cases of

Baker v. Carr and Shaw v. Reno

300

What are the two ways James Madison says factions can be controlled in Federalist 10?

Preventing their causes

Limiting their effects

300

Editing and revising a bill is done through the

Committee/subcommittee process

300

The annual budget process and allocating money to different departments is called

Appropriations

400

435 representatives are distributed across the 50 states based on population. This process is called

Reapportionment

400

The concept of "judicial restraint" means judges

Will rule based on what is explicitly stated in the Constitution

400

In Federalist 78, Alexander Hamilton makes what argument in regards to the strength of the Judicial Branch, in relation to the other branches?

It is the weakest of the three branches and does not have the power of the "purse" or the "sword"

400

A president gets 10 days to sign or veto a bill. Not doing either, resulting in the bill not being signed into a law, is called

Pocket veto

400

Name the difference between the Free Exercise and Establishment Clauses of the First Amendment

Free Exercise Clause - peoples' free practice of religion cannot be limited

Establishment Clause - the government cannot make law, endorse, etc. a certain religion over another

500

Name a synonym for "wasteful spending" in relation to what is included in a proposed bill

Pork/pork barrel/logrolling

500

In what cases does the Supreme Court have original jurisdiction?

Disputes between the states

500

In Federalist 51, James Madison makes the argument between checks and balances and separation of powers. Explain the difference between the two

Separation of powers - the different roles given to each branch

Checks and balances - the ability for each branch to limit the effects of another branch

500

Explain cloture AND identify the threshold needed to reach it

Cloture - a vote taken to end a filibuster (extended speech to stall vote on a bill)

3/5s

500

A Congressperson voting a certain way on a bill based solely on which political party supports it is representative of which model of representation?

Politico

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