Voting Rights & Voting Behavior
Political Parties & Interest Groups
Elections & Campaigns
The Media
100

This is one factor that negatively impacts voter turnout

Political efficacy/apathy, voting locations/time, midterm elections, primary elections, obstacles to registration

100

These are TWO ways in which political parties act as linkage institutions. 

Educating voters, mobilizing voter registration, publishing platforms, nominating candidates

100

Delaware uses this type of primary election, and how it works

Closed primary - only voters registered with either party can participate. 

100

The repeal of this law in the 1980s led to a major increase in partisanship in the media

Fairness Doctrine

200

These are TWO models of voting behavior, and how they effect voters' decisions

Rational-choice

Prospective

Retrospective

Party-line


200

These are TWO examples of how political parties have changed over time. 

Democrats: originally conservative, states' rights party - became more diverse and liberal over time, especially after 1948

Republicans: originally liberal, active federal government party - became more conservative and deregulatory over time, especially after 1964

200

These are TWO reasons why incumbents have a significant advantage in elections

Name-recognition, funding, party support, experience
200

These are TWO ways in which the media acts as a linkage institution

- informing voters about issues, elections, policies

- watchdog role: monitoring the government

- gatekeeping role: what's "newsworthy"

- co-equal (?) power to the three branches

- direct engagement via social media

300

These are three laws or election policies (not amendments) designed to increase voter turnout

Australian ballots; absentee ballots; NVRA (1993); HAVA (2002); motor-voter laws

300

These are THREE barriers to third-party success in elections

Ballot access, winner-take-all voting, lack of funding, spoiler effect, major party debate rules

300

This was the decision in the Citizens United v. FEC (2010) ruling, AND two of its outcomes.

Political spending = speech, and therefore cannot be limited. Massive influx of corporate & foreign cash into campaigns, and rise of dark money. 
300

These are THREE media outlets and their ideological leanings.

CNN, NYT, HuffPo, Atlantic, MoJo - Left-leaning

AP, NBC, ABC, CBS - Centrist

FOX, Economist, Washington Times - Right-leaning

400

These were FOUR Amendments that expanded voting rights

14th 15th 17th 19th 23rd 24th 26th

400

These are FOUR types of interest groups, and how the impact elections

BONUS: Provide two specific examples of interest groups

501(c)3, 501(c)4, Professional Associations, Trade Associations, Single-Issue Groups, Think Tanks, Ideological Groups, Intergovernmental Lobbies

400

These are FOUR impacts of the electoral college on elections. 

- Winner-take all = focus on swing states

- overrepresentation of small state

- underrepresentation of large states

- political apathy

- popular vote doesn't = victory

- third parties don't win

400

These are FOUR examples of how the media has evolved over time and its impacts on politics. 

Newspapers > Radio > TV > Internet > Social Media

Increasingly democratized

Increasingly polarized/partisan

Microtargeting/Narrowcasting/Bubbling

Direct communication with voters 

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