Voting Rights
Electoral College
Redistricting
Political Parties
SCOTUS Cases/ Media Literacy
100
What are 5 requirements to vote in New York? 
Be registered to vote in NY

Be a US citizen

Be 18 by election day

Live at your address 30 days preceding the election

Not be in prison or on parole

Not be currently judged mentally incompetent by a court

100

In your own words, what is the Electoral College? 

The Electoral College is a set of electors who are selected by both the Democratic and Republican Parties to elect the President.

100

What is required of each state to reapportion?

Done every 10 years, Done by the state legislatures, must be signed by the governor, Determines the size and shape of the district, Meant to be a way to ensure each vote counts

100

What are the two nationally recognized political parties in the United States? 

Democrats and Republicans

100

What was decided in Baker v Carr?

"One man, one vote"

200

What is an absentee ballot and who qualifies? 

An absentee ballot is a ballot completed and typically mailed in advance of an election by a voter who is unable to be present at the polls.

Qualifiers: People who are... 

Away from county - College, Military

Illness or disability

In a Veterans Administration (VA) Hospital

In prison awaiting a trial

200

How many electors are there in the Electoral College?

538

200

What does each state require about how the state legislature district lines are drawn? 

Contiguous and compact

200

How many types of registered political parties are in the United States?

200

200

What was decided in Wesberry v Sanders?

SCOTUS ordered House districts to be as near equal in population as possible (extension of Baker v. Carr to Congressional districts).

300

What are the Amendments to the Constitution related to voting? 

15th, 17th, 19th, 23rd, 24th, and 26th Amendments

300

How many electoral votes are necessary to win the Presidency and how many states would it take to win? 

270 votes, 11 states

300

What is gerrymandering?

Gerrymandering helps political parties gain seats in the US House of Representatives and State Legislatures 

300

What are the functions of political parties?

Recruit candidates and nominate candidates

300

What was decided in Reynolds v Sims? 

Court held that the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment includes a "one-person, one-vote" principle.

400

What is a ballot measure?

A ballot measure is a piece of proposed legislation to be approved or rejected by eligible voters.

400

How many electoral votes does NY have? 

28

400

What are the four terms associated with gerrymandering?

Cracking, packing, hijacking, and kidnapping

400

What has led to the weakening of political parties? 

Civil service, primary elections, dealignment, polling, the media, phone banks, direct mail, the Internet

400

How can you tell when news is fake? 

Consider the source, check the author, read beyond that one source, check the date, check your biases, check to see if it is a parody, ask the experts!

500

List as many reasons as you can to describe why people don't vote: 

Too Busy, Difficulty in registering ,Out of town – (difficulty of absentee voting), Not interested, Illness or emergency, Forgot, Transportation problem, Bad weather, Refused, or Didn’t like the candidates

500

Name one other country that uses the Electoral College system

Burundi, Estonia, Kazakhstan, Madagascar, Myanmar, Pakistan, Trinidad and Tobago and Vanuatu

500

What congressional district is Smithtown in and who is the representative?

District 1

Lee Zeldin

500

Identify and describe the two types of primaries 

Open primary – allows any registered voter to cast their ballot in either party's primary

Closed primary – mandates that only voters registered with a party, vote in that party's primary

500

What was the class code for your class on the online video media literacy website?

GET-VIDEO-JUICE

M
e
n
u