Voting Behavior
Presidential Election Process
More Presidential Election process
Campaign Finance
Interest Groups
Political Parties
100

In this form of voting, citizens typically emphasize the economic performance of the incumbent party/administration

What is retrospective voting?

100

Originally designed to limit democratic influence on the selection of the president, this required 270 votes to win the presidency.

What is the electoral college?

100

This method of selecting a presidential candidates involves public discussion among party members. 

What are caucuses? 

100

This organization can contribute directly to candidates, but there are limits to individual contributions. 

What are political action committees (PAC's)?
100

They recieve the benefit of a collective good but don't contribute to its creation

Who are free riders?

100

This has declined as the share of the electorate identifying as independent has increased

What is party identification?

200

In this form of voting, citizens choose candidates on the basis of their positions they promise to advance in the future.

What is prospective voting? 

200

If no presidential candidate wins a majority of electoral votes, this body decides the presidency.

What is the House of Representatives?

200

Some states have pledge laws which punish these officials who vote against the presidential candidate who won the most votes in their state?

What are faithless electors? 

200

This organization cannot contribute directly to candidates but there are no donor contribution limits.

What are Super PAC's?

200

This category of interest group attempts to benefit everyone in a community

What are public interest groups?

200
As politics has become nationalized, this pattern of voter choices has become more and more rare

What is split-ticket voting?

300
In this type of voting, citizens calculate the benefits to their self-interest.

What is rational choice voting?

300

These states are very close in polling between Presidential candidates and attract a large share of candidate attention.

What are battleground states?

300

A Presidential candidate must be at least this age.

What is 35? 

300

In this case, the majority of the court ruled that corporations deserve protections of political speech in the same way as individuals.

What is Citizens United v. FEC?

300

These are efforts by interest groups to acquire resources and overcome the collective action problem

What are selective benefits? 

300

A strong "party in government" enacts this into policy changes once in office

What is a party platform?

400

This variable is the strongest influence over the likelihood to vote

What is socio-economic status? (Also accept education)

400
Examples since 2008 include: Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Georgia, and Arizona. 
What are swing states?
400

This party tends to have longer nominating contests because most states award delegates via proportional representation.

What is the Democratic Party?

400

This legislation attempted to limit PAC's from advertising in weeks prior to primaries/caucuses and general elections.  

What is the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (McCain-Feingold)? 

400
The pattern that members of executive agencies take positions in private lobbying organizations 

What is the revolving door?

400

During one of these, party coalitions change dramatically and are often followed by a new party era

What is a critical election?

500

Because of the relative difficulty of this, US voter turnout rates are relatively lower than most democracies. 

What is voter registration?

500

This approach to selecting a party nominee can encourage more extreme candidates being selected.

What is a closed primary?

500

This form of awarding electoral votes in 48/50 states discourages third parties from forming.

What is winner-take-all? 

500

This first modern legislation regulating elections established requirements that campaigns disclose donors and establish limits on campaign contributions. 

What is the Federal Election Campaign Act, 1971?

500

Madison's argument in Federalist 10 about how to best deal with factions assumes this theory of democracy to be most accurate

What is the pluralist theory?

500

States compete with one another for an early placement in the nomination process

What is front-loading?

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