Congress
The Presidency
The Judiciary
Bureaucracy
Know your cases
200

This chamber of Congress is designed to represent all states equally.

What is the Senate?

200

This term refers to politicians who are completing their tenure in office after being voted out.

What is a lame duck?

200

In 1987, this body exercised its constitutional authority in rejecting President Reagan's nomination of Robert Bork to the Supreme Court.

What is the Senate?

200

What federal agency is in charge of protecting endanger animals, natural resources, and study the effects of Climate Change? It was created by President Nixon. 

What is the Environmental Protection Agency?

200

This court case established the Supreme Court's informal power of judicial review.

What is Marbury v. Madison?

250

The constitutional reason Franklin Roosevelt reported to Congress on December 8, 1941, that Japan had attacked America.

What is Congress' power to declare war?

250

In addition to signing and vetoing, this is the third option afforded to presidents upon the presentment of bills from Congress.

What is the pocket veto?

250

This Federalist paper set forth the rationale behind an independent judiciary.

What is Federalist #78?

250

Civil Service reform replaced the patronage system with this alternative way to staff government.

What is the merit system?

250

In this case, the Court struck down racially-based gerrymandering.

What is Shaw v. Reno?

300

This person decides committee appointments in the House

Who is the Speaker of the House?

300

In 1942, Franklin Roosevelt used this implied power to establish relocation centers and detail American citizens. Would be used by many Presidents after him, like Obamas controversial DACA path to citizenship and Trumps "Muslim Ban"

What is an executive order?

300

Latin for "let the decision stand" this concept guides the judiciary to rely heavily on precedents.

What is stare decisis?

300

This image reflects this relationship between regulators, legislators, and lobbyists.

What is an iron triangle?

300
At the center of this case was the question of the "Necessary and Proper" clause and the Supremacy clause of the Contitution

What is Mcculloch v Maryland

350

In 2013, Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) spoke for 21 hours and 19 minutes in opposition to the Affordable Care Act per this loophole in Senate rules.

What is the filibuster?

350

In 1913, Woodrow Wilson began the modern tradition by which presidents use this annual message as a tool for agenda-setting.

What is the State of the Union address?

350

Much like a president, a judge can be removed through this constitutional process.

What is impeachment?

350

Jimmy Carter tried to cancel superfluous water projects early in his term as president, decrying them as this type of legislation.

What is pork barrell legislation?

350
In this case, the Court ruled, "one person one vote."

What is Baker v. Carr?

400

The formal motion used to end or limit debate in the Senate.

What is cloture?
400

The term for using the Presidency and access of communication to pitch their policy agenda, and bend public opinion and pressure Congress into cooperating

What is the Bully Pulpit

400
Name at least 7 of the current 9 justices on the Supreme Court

John Roberts, Ketanji Brown Jackson, Clarence Thomas, Samuel Alito, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan, Neil Gorsuch, Brett Kavanaugh, and Amy Coney Barret

400

This type of federal agency is in charge of making and enforcing rules to protect the public interest in some sector of the economy, and for judging disputes over those rules.

What is an Independent Regulatory Comission

400

This case we did not learn about was ruling in this case regarding the 2000 Florida electoral recount raised serious questions about the Supreme Court's legitimacy.

What is Bush v. Gore?

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