Participation /
Voting
Parties
Interest Groups
Media
Campaigns
100

Define political participation

Participation that is NOT voting

100

Define political party

A coalition of people who seek to control government by contesting elections and winning elected office

100

Define the term "interest group" 

An organization that engages in politics on behalf of its members and seeks to influence government policy

100

List 3 sources of media

Newspapers, radio, TV, Internet (blogs, traditional media online), social media
100

What is an "open seat" race?

A race in which there is no incumbent candidate

200

Define mobilization

“The process by which candidates, parties, activists, and groups induce other people to participate”

200

What is the main alternative to single-member plurality districts (SMP)?

Proportional representation (PR) system

200

What is the difference between an interest group and a party?

Parties run candidates and contest elections, interest groups do not

200

Define the digital divide 

The (large) difference in access and use of internet based on demographics, especially income, race, and age

200

What is meant by the phrase "permanent campaign?"

Describes the fact that elected officials in modern politics are always working to increase the chances of their reelection; there is no “down time”

300

List the three types of political participation, and provide an example for each

1. Conventional (Campaign activities, signing petitions, yard signs, donations, rallies, phone banking, rallies, marches) 

2. Unconventional - civil disobedience (sit-ins, occupations) 

3. Unconventional (riots, looting, physical violence)

300

What are the 3 aspects / levels of a party?

Party organization (national, state, local levels)

Party in government (politicians elected as party candidates)

Party in the electorate (citizens who identify with party)

300

What are the 3 types of benefits used to overcome the free-rider problem? 

BONUS: define the free-rider problem 

Selective - material incentive 

Purposive - working towards goal 

Solidary - belonging to a group

The tendency for people to try and enjoy the benefits of a group without incurring the costs associated with joining the group

300

What are the 3 roles of the media that we discussed in class? 

The media should: facilitate public debate, be objective, and serve as a watchdog for government and politics

300

What are 3 things that campaigns aim to accomplish?

Increase candidate name recognition 

Mobilization, “get-out-the-vote” efforts 

Make issue position (campaign platforms) known

Interact with opposing candidates 

Advertise and engage with media

400

What are the current voting restrictions in the US? 

1. Must be a citizen

2. Must be 18 years old 

3. Must be registered 

Bonus: whether or not you can vote from prison / having been imprisoned varies by state

400

List 2 impacts of polarization on Congress and 2 impacts of polarization on the electorate 

Congress: impacts which issues make it to the Congressional agenda, decreases ability of parties to work together and pass legislation

Electorate: impacts tone of political discourse, increases public acceptance of political violence

400

List the types of interest groups we discussed in class (hint: there are 5), and specify which is the most common

Economic groups (most common) 

Labor organizations (unions) 

Citizen groups (public interest) 

Single-issue groups 

Government groups

400

Explain the Fairness Doctrine and the Equal Time Rule

Fairness Doctrine: required presentation of several points of view to ensure balanced coverage (ended in 1987)

Equal Time Rule: requires equal airtime for non-news programming to all candidates running for office (think State of the Union and response)

400

What did the Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Act of 2002 do?

Raised limits on hard money / money given directly to a candidate 

Linked limits to future inflation 

Banned unlimited (soft) money to parties  

Largely upheld by the SCOTUS case, McConnell v. FEC (2003)

500

What are the Amendments related to voting that we discussed in class (hint: there are 5) 

15th Amendment - right to vote for African-American men 

19th Amendment - right to vote for women 

23rd Amendment - DC residents can vote in presidential elections 

24th Amendment - eliminates poll taxes

26th Amendment - right to vote for 18 year olds

500

How does the electoral system in the US perpetuate the two-party system? 

Single-member plurality (SMP) districts focus competition between the top 2 candidates by electing a single candidate based on whoever gets the plurality of the vote; voters may feel as though for a third party is "wasted"

500
Explain the Iron Triangle

The interaction between executive agencies, Congressional committees, and interest groups that allows for the expansion of political influence and provides an institutionalized position for interest groups in the policymaking process. 

500

Give 2 arguments in support of, and 2 arguments against, the idea that the media impacts us (think about the psychological phenomena we discussed in class)

BONUS: Explain one phenomenon from each category

The media does NOT impact us: selective perception, selective exposure, selective retention 

The media DOES impact us: social-learning theory, agenda-setting, priming, framing 


500

Explain the SCOTUS ruling in Citizens United v. FEC (2010)

SCOTUS ruled that corporations, unions, and issue advocacy organizations can spend unlimited amounts of money on independent political expenditures. This case also overturned the previous ruling on spending caps 60 days before a general election and 30 days before a primary election.

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