Political Parties
Elections
Campaign Finances
Voting Behavior
Linkage Institutions
100

These are the two major political parties in the U.S.

What are the Democrats and Republicans?

100

These elections determine party nominees.

What are primaries?

100

This is money given directly to candidates that is regulated.

What is hard money?

100

This type of voting is based on what benefits the voter personally.

What is rational choice voting?

100

This institution nominates candidates and organizes government.

What is parties?

200

This president warned against political parties in his farewell address.

Who is Washington?

200

This type of primary allows voters to choose any party’s ballot.

What is an open primary?

200

This organization regulates campaign finance.

What is the Federal Election Commission (FEC)?

200

This type of voting is based on past performance.

What is retrospective voting?

200

This institution informs the public and spreads political information.

What is media?

300

This is the set of beliefs that helps determine which party someone supports.

What is ideology?

300

This event officially nominates a party’s candidate.

What is a national party convention?

300

This is money spent on party activities with fewer restrictions.

What is soft money?

300

This type of voting is based on future expectations.

What is prospective voting?

300

This institution organizes people to influence policy and lobby government.

What is interest groups?

400

This is one reason minor parties struggle to win elections.

What is the winner-take-all system?

(lack of funding, not in debates)

400

This is when the general election is held.

What is the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November?

400

This type of group raises money to support candidates and elections.

What is a PAC (Political Action Committee)?

400

This amendment lowered the voting age to 18.

What is 26th?

400

This is how interest groups influence policy.

What is lobbying?

500

This early political group supported a strong national government and helped start party divisions.

What are Federalists?

500

These states receive the most campaign attention because they could go either way.

What are swing states?

500

This Supreme Court case allowed unlimited independent political spending.

What is Citizens United v. FEC?

500

This advantage helps current officeholders win re-election.

What is incumbency advantage?

500

This institution allows citizens to directly choose leaders.

What is elections?

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