Unit 1
Unit 4
Unit 5
Legislative Branch
Founding Docs & Court Cases
100

This system of government has power divided between multiple levels of government, a central government with regional governments underneath it. 

What is federalism?

100

This is the process by which people form their beliefs about politics. 

What is political socialization?

100

These groups aim to influence policy-making and makeup 1/3 of an Iron Triangle.

What are interest groups?

100

This legislative house has proportional representation and has to follow a stricter set of rules, procedures, and committee assignments because of its large size.

What is the House of Representatives?

100

This founding document argued that a large central government threatened individual liberties.

What is Brutus no. 1?

200

These are the types of powers that both state and federal governments have, like the power to tax.  

What are concurrent powers?

200
This major political party has a liberal ideology.

What is the Democratic Party?

200

These are institutions that allow citizens to participate in government and communicate preferences to policymakers.

What are linkage institutions?

200

This is a tool senators can use to prevent voting on a bill by talking or debating for long periods of time. 

 What is a filibuster?

200

This founding document argued that the best way to control factions was through a federal republic where power would be divided between different levels of government.

What is Federalist no. 10?

300

This compromise led to a bicameral legislature where one house would be equal representation and the other would be proportional.

What is the Connecticut (Great) Compromise?

300

This type of political ideology favors less federal government involvement in social and economic issues, with more power to the states.

What is conservative ideology?

300

This amendment gave women the right to vote. 

What is the 19th Amendment?

300

This area of the federal spending budget is the portion that Congress can decide what to do with it.

What is discretionary spending?

300

This founding document argued that a unitary executive was important because it would make it easy to hold one person accountable rather than many and that it would lead to less indecisiveness.

What is Federalist no. 70?

400
This principle of government means that the government's power comes only from the consent of the governed, the people.

What is popular sovereignty?

400

These types of polls follow how views of a candidate change over the course of a campaign.

What are tracking polls?

400

This type of voting ideology is when people vote based on how a candidate performed in the past?

What is retrospective voting?

400

Bills can be introduced in either house of Congress except for bills dealing with this.

What are bills of revenue?

400

This founding document argued for checks and balances in our government and a separation of powers.

What is Federalist No. 51?

500

This rebellion showed the weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation.

What is Shay's Rebellion?
500

Congress is responsible for this type of economic policy. 

What is fiscal policy?

500

This voting system is the reason why we have a two party system in the USA.

What is a winner-take-all voting system? (aka First Past the Post)

500

This type of legislation is used in negotiation to get votes and support from specific groups of people, and is used to fund local projects.

What is pork-barrel legislation?

500

This court case dealt with the Commerce Clause of the Constitution when the Supreme Court stated that Congress overstepped its authority by trying to regulate guns around schools under the Commerce Clause. 

What is US v. Lopez (1995)?

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