Voting
Politics
Interest Groups
The Media
Campaigns
100

Prospective voting 

Voting based on the candidates future agenda

100

What is the importance of third parties 

influencing party agendas or providing opinions from minorities 

100

3 tactics interests groups use 

lobbying, rallies, advertisements 

100

Mass Media.

A variety of media that reaches a large audience via mass communication

100

Soft Money.

  • Unlimited money that is donated to a political party and not to an individual candidate

  • This legally can not be coordinated with a candidate’s campaign

200

Which amendment's gave people the right to vote

15th and 19th amendment 

200

A national convention held by delegates where they can speak on their policy

Caucuses  

200

occurs when interest groups tries to inform, persuade, and mobilize large numbers of people

Grassroot lobbying 

200

Horse-Race Journalism

Tend to focus on who is in the lead, rather than qualification and platforms of a candidate

200

A PAC and a Super PAC

- Political Action Committee - organization that works to influence election outcomes usually through financial support

- A PAC that has virtually no limit on how much money they can raise & spend

300

List 3 main reasons why people think their vote doesn't matter

Electoral College(Winner takes all), State that affiliates with the opposite party, voter fraud, if a candidate is ahead

300

What is the difference between a open and closed primary

vote for any party in a open primary, register for specific party in closed 

300

how can Interest groups help campaigning 

endorse candidates, run television and radio ads, direct mail marketing and polling

300

What were the 3 main new stations before the 1990's

ABC, CBS, and NBC

300

Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (McCain/Feingold)

  • Attempted to ban the use of soft money while raising the limits an individual can give

  • Attempted to reduce attack ads with the “Stand By Your Ad” provision

  • Required candidates to state that they “support this message” on all official campaign ads.

400

Retrospective voting

Voting on an incumbent based on the past actions

400
how does the president get elected

Electoral college

400

Filing lawsuits to challenge or support gov actions

litigation

400

Two ways the President uses media that contributes to political party organization to decline.

- Mudslinging. The goal of this technique is to help the candidate by damaging the reputation of the other candidates. 

- Talk shows. When a candidate gets himself on a talk show, he has the perfect opportunity to talk about himself and promote his campaign.

- Social Media

400

There are 8 roles in the organization of a campaign. Name 3.

  • Campaign Manager

  • Campaign Counsel

  • Media Consultant

  • Campaign Staffer

  • Advance Workers

  • Policy Advisors

  • Pollster

  • Press Secretary

500

Which model of voting does a person vote for every person apart of a certain political party without even needing to know who they are

party-line voting

500

Who takes office if the president dies

Vice president

500

3 groups in iron triangle

Interest groups, bureaucracy, Congress

500

New York Times Co. v. United States

The Supreme Court limited the government’s ability to use prior restraint to prevent publication. This case reinforced the constitutional principle of freedom of the press.

500

Citizens United v. FEC.

Supreme Court ruled that laws that limited how much businesses or unions spent on campaigns was a violation of their free speech.

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