Enlightenment & Documents
Democracy Models & Debates
Legislative Branch
Executive Branch (The Presidency)
Federal Bureaucracy & Oversight
100

This 18th‑century European intellectual movement inspired ideas like natural rights, social contract, and separation of powers.

What is the Enlightenment?

100

This model emphasizes broad citizen participation via town halls, initiatives, and referenda.

What is participatory democracy?

100

This bicameral body must pass identical bills in both houses before sending them to the president.

What is Congress?

100

 The formal power allowing the president to refuse to sign legislation; Congress can override it with a two‑thirds vote.

What is the veto?

100

 The 15 leaders who head major executive departments and advise the president; they are typically Senate‑confirmed.

What are Cabinet secretaries (the Cabinet)?

200

The document that declares "all men are created equal" and articulates natural rights and government by consent.

What is the Declaration of Independence?

200

This model relies on organized interest groups competing to influence public policy (examples: NAACP, NRA).

What is pluralist democracy?

200

Unrelated additions attached to bills that often benefit a member’s agenda or help secure passage.

What are riders?

200

This is when the president takes no action on a bill, and Congress adjourns within 10 days, causing the bill to die.

What is a pocket veto?

200

 The term for the discretionary rulemaking authority Congress delegates to agencies so they can implement laws.

What is delegated discretionary authority (rulemaking)?

300

Jefferson substituted John Locke’s "life, liberty, and property" with this phrase in the Declaration.

What is "the pursuit of happiness"?

300

This model assumes governance by educated/elite actors; the Electoral College can reflect it.

What is elite democracy?

300

The House official who recognizes speakers, assigns committees, and is always from the majority party.

Who is the Speaker of the House?

300

Formal foreign‑policy tools that the president can negotiate without Senate ratification.

What are executive agreements?

300

The mutually beneficial three‑way relationship among congressional committees, bureaucratic agencies, and interest groups.

What is the iron triangle?

400

This essay champions a single energetic executive and influenced thinking about the presidency.

What is Federalist No. 70?

400

This Anti‑Federalist essay warned a large republic would be too distant from citizens and threaten liberties.

What is Brutus 1?

400

This Senate tactic allows unlimited debate to delay legislation unless ended by cloture (60 votes).

What is a filibuster?

400

These presidential directives to agencies carry the force of law within the executive branch but are not statutes.

What are executive orders?

400

Congress’s principal tool to check agencies is by controlling agency funding and spending authorization.

What is the power of the purse?

500

This Federalist essay argues that factions are best controlled by a large republic and the separation of powers.

What is Federalist No. 10?

500

James Madison used this collective term for groups pursuing self‑interest that can threaten minority rights.

What are factions?

500

The congressional power, listed in Article I §8, that allows Congress to raise money, declare war, and regulate commerce.

 What are the enumerated powers (Article I, §8)?

500

The presidential role described by Teddy Roosevelt as a "bully pulpit" refers to this ability to influence public opinion and pressure Congress.

What is using the bully pulpit (presidential persuasion)?

500

The 1883 reform that replaced the patronage system with a merit‑based civil service hiring process.

  What is the Pendleton Civil Service Act?

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