Electoral Process
Media & Voting
Intrest Group
Campaign Finance
Political Parties
100

Legislative, judicial, and executive.

What are government branches?

100

The new station that is most likely to support a Republican candidate.

What is Fox News?

100

An organization that seeks to influence public policy.

What is an interest group?

100

Money that has restrictions on spending.

What is hard money?

100

This is the single greatest influence in establishing a person’s first-party identification.

What is family (parents)?

200

If you are attempting to influence the political process through extreme measures, such as boycotts and picketing.

What is unconventional political participation?

200

A ballot cast by a voter who votes for all the candidates of one party.

What is straight-ticket voting?

200

Something interest groups contribute to campaigns.

What is Money?
200

Money with no spending restrictions?

What is soft money?

200

The years 1860–1928 saw the ascendency of this party.

What is the Republican party?

300

A national meeting of delegates elected in primaries, caucuses, or state conventions who assemble once every four years to nominate candidates for president and vice president, ratify the party platform, elect officers, and adopt rules.

What is a national convention?

300

Media effects is the term used for changes in __________ due to the influence of news sources.

What is public opinion?

300

Communicating with government officials to persuade them to support a particular policy position.

What is lobbying?

300

A group formed by businesses and corporations or labor unions to make donations.

What is a PAC?

300

Women voters today are most likely to identify as this party.

What is Democratic?

400

Elections to select party nominees in which voters can decide on Election Day whether they want to participate in the Democratic or Republican contests.

What are open primaries?

400

Political journalism of elections resembles coverage of horse races because of the focus on polling data, public perception instead of candidate policy, and almost exclusive reporting on candidate differences rather than similarities.



What is horse race journalism?

400

The main objective of an interest group.

What is getting laws passed?

400

They oversee and enforce all campaign finance laws.

Who is FEC?

400

This is the formal governing body of both major parties.

What is the national party comittee?

500

A feature of the Electoral College is when a candidate who gets the most votes wins all of a state's electoral votes.

What is the winner take all system?
500

Determining which public-policy questions will be debated or considered.

What is agenda setting?

500

The most successful interest group in court.

What is the NRA?

500

A 1976 court cast that decided people can spend their money on whatever they want and that if candidates accept public funds then they will have restrictions.

What is Buckley V Valeo?

500

This is the most visible instrument that parties use to formulate, convey, and promote public policy.

What is Platform?

M
e
n
u