Civil Liberties
Voting & Elections
Checks & Balances
The President
The Constitution
100

The first amendment protects these five liberties.

What are religion, speech, press, assembly, and petition? 

100

This system elects the president.

What is the electoral college?

100

The president can reject a law passed by Congress using this power.

What is veto?

100
The powers of the president, by and large, have GROWN | SHRANK over the past 200 years?

What is grown?

100

This system in the Constitution balances power between state and federal government levels.

What is federalism?

200

The fourth amendment protects Americans from these.

What are unwarranted search and seizures?

200

Voters with less education tend to vote more in line with this political ideology?

What are conservatives or Republicans?

200
This branch has the power to investigate wrongdoing by any branch (including itself!).

What is Congress/the Legislative Branch?

200

The growth of the powers of the president is largely because of these types of powers claimed to exist in Article II that suggest certain broad responsibilities but don't directly say them.

What are implied powers?

200

Even though states have some powers, the federal government is given authority over them through this "supreme" clause.

What is the supremacy clause?

300

The right to petition means this.

What is the right to ask the government to do something or to contact the government about your view on something?

300

The electoral college provides each state with votes based on its population, but is capped at 538 total votes. Therefore, a president could be elected by winning the electoral vote but losing this vote.

What is the popular vote?

300
To remove a president from office, Congress must go through this two-part process (explain it).

What is...

Impeachment by the House (majority)

Conviction & removal by the Senate (2/3)?

300

The president has this power to absolve someone of any crime or charge. Scholars have debated recently if the president can use it on himself...

What is pardon?

300

Article IV of the Constitution deals mostly with these parts of the US government.

What are the states?

400

The freedom of religion in the first amendment includes these two clauses.

What are the establishment and free exercise clauses?

400

These require you to have identification to vote in some states.

What are voter ID laws?

400

This is a power the Congress has to limit the influence of the Supreme Court, but it has only been used once!

What is impeachment of SCOTUS justices?

400
The president's powers in this particular policy area have expanded the most in the 20th century.

What is foreign policy or military policy?

400

Article V deals with this process.

What is the Amendment process?

500

This case limited free speech in certain cases. Name the case and explain how it limited speech.

Lots of answers.

Shenck v. US, clear and present danger = best example

500

Allowing people to vote early, vote absentee (when they aren't in their home state on election day), or register on the same day they vote would increase this. However, some criticize these policies, as they could lead to more voter fraud.

Voter turnout

500

The Supreme Court can declare a law unconstitutional that is passed by Congress, or declare one of these directives issued by the President unconstitutional in checking the power of the other branches

What is an executive order?

500

The President can veto a law outright, or he use this kind of a veto, where he simply lets the law expire without a signature.

What is a pocket veto?

500

The Bill of Rights was added by this founder to appease anti-federalist opponents to the Constitution. Oddly, it has become the best-known part of the Constitution, even thought this individual was much prouder of his work on the rest of it.

Who is James Madison?

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