Redrawing the Lines (Redistricting)
The Art of Influence (Interest Groups)
Follow the Money (Campaign Finance)
The Iron Triangle
Campaigns & the Constitution
100

This term describes the practice of drawing congressional districts to pack together voters of the same party to ensure a specific electoral outcome.

Gerrymandering

100

This is defined as an organization of people with shared policy goals who enter the policy process at several points to achieve them.

Interest Group

100

These organizations raise money from individuals and then distribute it as "hard money" contributions directly to candidates.

Political Action Committees (PACs)

100

The three corners of an "Iron Triangle" consist of an interest group, a bureaucratic agency, and _______________.

congressional committee

100

In Citizens United v. FEC, the Supreme Court ruled that corporate funding of independent political broadcasts is protected by this Amendment.

the First Amendment (Freedom of Speech)

200

This constitutional principle requires that congressional districts be drawn with approximately equal populations to ensure every citizen's vote carries the same weight.

"one person, one vote" (or equal protection)

200

This specific activity involves a group representative communicating directly with government officials to persuade them to support a policy.

Lobbying

200

This 1974 Act first required federal candidates to disclose exactly who contributed money to their campaigns.

Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA)

200

In the Iron Triangle, interest groups provide this to members of Congress during an election year in exchange for friendly legislation.

electoral support or campaign donations

200

This shift in modern elections has decreased the role of political parties in managing campaigns while increasing the role of individual candidates.

candidate-centered campaigns

300

A major consequence of gerrymandering is that it makes general elections less competitive, often leading to an increase in this.

Polarization

300

Unlike political parties, interest groups do not do this, though they may support those who do.

Run candidates for office or try to win elections

300

Created following Citizens United, these groups can raise unlimited funds as long as the money is used for independent expenditures and not given to a candidate.

Super PACs

300

Within the triangle, bureaucratic agencies provide what things to interest groups.

low regulation or special favors

300

Modern candidates rely heavily on these professionals to help adjust and curate their public image for the media.

professional consultants

400

This landmark 1962 case established that unevenly distributed representation in rural vs. urban districts denied citizens "equal protection under the law."

Baker v. Carr

400

Organizations like the NRA or MADD, which represent members who focus their intense advocacy efforts on one specific cause or narrow policy area, are known as this.

Single-issue interest groups

400

This is the name for political donations that are strictly regulated by law and come from individuals or PACs.

hard money

400

Critics of this system argue it is problematic because it encourages a goal of competing for power rather than pursuing this.

public good or general welfare

400

This federal agency was specifically formed to regulate elections and candidate spending.

Federal Election Commission (FEC)

500

In this 1993 case, the Supreme Court ruled that redistricting based primarily on race—known as racial gerrymandering—was unconstitutional.

Shaw v. Reno

500

To educate members of Congress, a green energy interest group might send a research report to a congressional office. What function in this interest group fulfilling?

Providing interest-specific information to lawmakers

500

This 2002 law, also known as McCain-Feingold, aimed to eliminate "soft money" contributions to national political parties.

Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA)

500

In the triangle relationship, Congress provides this to bureaucratic agencies.

funding or authority to make/enforce regulations

500

This form of lobbying involves interest groups encouraging regular citizens or members to contact their legislators directly.

grassroots lobbying

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