Introduction
Foundations
Principles
Constitution
Legislative Branch
100
One leader has complete control of their government.

What is an autocratic government?

100

This Enlightenment philosopher influenced the Declaration of Independence with his ideas of natural rights, consent of the governed, and right to alter or abolish the government.

Who is John Locke?

100

This principle means that even the government must follow the law.

What is rule of law?
100

These can be added to the Constitution according to Article V.

What are amendments?

100

The chamber of Congress that can initiate revenue bills.

What is the House of Representatives?

200
This is an example of a civic duty.

Going to school, paying taxes, obeying laws, serving on a jury

200

These are the 3 natural rights.

What are life, liberty, and property?

200

The U.S. government has 3 separate branches of government with each its own job which is an example of this constitutional principle.

What is separation of powers? 

200

This was the first governing document of the U.S.A.

What are the Articles of Confederation?

200

This process for drawing districts to give one party an advantage gets its name from an amphibian.

What is gerrymandering?

300

Some key beliefs of this political ideology is government involvement, equality, and restriction on gun ownership.

What is liberal?

300

This document was created in England in 1215 to limit the king's power of taxation and created due process.

What is the Magna Carta?

300
Federalism means that this level of Government is the supreme law of the land.

What is national or federal?

300

The result of the Great Compromise.

What is a bicameral Congress that's based in proportional & equal representation?
300

These are 2 delegated powers to Congress.

What is declare war, establish post offices, tax, regulate commerce, naturalization process, etc.

400

In French, this term means let it happen and it's a way to describe the conservative ideology of government's role in business.

What is Laissez-faire?

400

The Mayflower Compact features these two ideas that were later adopted to the U.S. Constitution.

What are social contract, consent of the governed, popular sovereignty, or popular sovereignty?
400

Equality under the law such as freedom of speech, freedom of religion, right to vote, etc. are all examples of this principle of government.

What are individual rights?

400

This compromise of the Constitution resulted in enslaved people being counted as 3/5 of a person toward representation & taxation.

What is the 3/5 Compromise?

400

The Legislative Branch can check the Executive branch by this.

What is approving presidential appointments or overriding a presidential veto?
500

These organizations create a list of beliefs (called a platform) and try to get their members elected.

What are political parties?

500

These are the 4 ideals of the Declaration of Independence.

What are Equality, Unalienable Rights, Consent of the Governed, and Right to Alter or Abolish the Govt?

500

The definition of republicanism.

What is electing representatives to the government to represent its people?

500
The Anti-Federalists demanded this if they were to ratify the Constitution.

What is the Bill of Rights?

500

The majority of the lawmaking process happens here.

What are committees?

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