Interest Group Basics
Types of Interest Groups
Tactics and Strategies
Power, Influence, and Lobbyists
Iron Triangles and Policy Making
100

What term does Madison use to describe interest groups? 

Factions

100

Which type promotes economic interests? 

Traditional interest groups 

100

What is the term for filing briefs to influence court cases? 

Amicus curiae briefs 

100

What do we call someone who is hired by an organization to influence policy?

A lobbyist 

100

Name one of the three parts of an iron triangle.

Interest groups, congressional committees, or bureaucratic agencies.

200

In which Federalist Paper did Madison warn about the dangers of factions? 

Federalist 10

200

The NAACP and NOW fall under which type of interest group? 

Equality interest groups 

200

What tactic involves working directly with legislators to influence policy decisions? 

Lobbying 

200

Lobbying is most effective on issues that are __________ and __________.

Narrow and technical

200

What is the purpose of an iron triangle?

To mutually support and influence public policy

300

Interest groups are protected by what amendment? 

The 1st Amendment 

300

Groups like the NRA and MADD are examples of which type of interest group?

Single Issue Groups
300
Name one political tool interest groups use during elections.

Endorsements, campaign contributions, report cards, or mobilizing voters.

300

What term refers to people cycling between government jobs and interest groups?

The revolving door

300

What is an example of a policymaking institution?

Congress, the courts, the presidency, or the bureaucracy.

400

What is the primary goal of an interest group? 

To influence public policy

400

Groups like the Sierra Club and Common Cause are classified as what type of interest group? 

Public Interest Groups

400

What is the "free rider problem"? 

People benefit from interest group actions without joining or contributing.

400

Name one reason lobbyists can be considered “good for America.”

Provide information, increase participation, represent interests beyond geography.

400

What is a policy agenda?

A set of issues viewed as important by policymakers.

500

Name two ways interest groups act as linkage institutions.

They express members' preferences to policymakers and convey government information to members 

500

What type of group represents government entities? 

Governmental interest groups 

500

Name three tactics mentioned in the handout that interest groups use to influence policy.

Mass mailings, litigation, media campaigns, boycotts, electioneering, initiatives/referendums, lobbying.

500

Name one criticism of lobbyists.

Wealthy interests are overrepresented, polarization, inequality, government gridlock.

500

In the “Highway Beautification Act” example, what did the iron triangle effectively turn the bill into?

A billboard protection law.

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