The Constitution & Federalism
Political Participation & Elections
Political Parties, Interest Groups, & Ideology
Institutions of Government
Civil Rights & Civil Liberties
100

This document created the first U.S. government but gave the national government almost no power.

Articles of Confederation

100

The belief that your political participation can influence government decisions.

Political Efficacy

100

A group that seeks to influence public policy but does not run its own candidates.

Interest Group

100

The branch of government responsible for making laws.

Congress

100

The first ten amendments to the Constitution.

Bill of Rights

200

Powers shared between the national and state governments fall under this constitutional principle.

Federalism

200

Elections in which voters choose a party’s nominee for the general election.

Primary Elections

200

The refusal of some people to join interest groups because they get benefits without participating.

Free-Rider Problem

200

The power of the Senate to confirm presidential appointments.

Advise and Consent

200

The clause in the First Amendment protecting religious freedom from government interference.

Free Exercise Clause

300

This clause in Article VI makes national law superior to state law.

Supremacy Clause

300

This amendment gave 18-year-olds the right to vote.

26th Amendment

300

A long-standing set of political beliefs about the proper role of government.

Political Ideology

300

A directive issued by the president that has the force of law.

Executive Order

300

Landmark case requiring states to provide a lawyer to defendants who cannot afford one.

Gideon v. Wainwright

400

The system in which each branch of government limits the power of the other two.

Checks and Balances

400

The process of redrawing district lines to benefit one political party.

Gerrymandering

400

The political ideology that favors limited government, lower taxes, and free markets.

Conservatism

400

A committee in Congress that handles taxation and spending bills.

Ways and Means Committee

400

Policies that attempt to address past discrimination by giving special consideration to minorities.

Affirmative Action

500

Court case that established the principle of judicial review.

Marbury v. Madison

500

The U.S. uses this system to elect the president instead of a national popular vote.

The Electoral College

500

The relationship among interest groups, congressional committees, and bureaucratic agencies.

Iron Triangle

500

A written justification the Supreme Court releases to explain its decision.

Majority Opinion

500

The doctrine that prevents evidence obtained illegally from being used in court.

Exclusionary Rule

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