Origins
Federalism
Congress
President
Checks and Balances
100

An important founding document written by Thomas Jefferson in 1776

The Declaration of Independence 

100

A kind of government where ALL power is derived from states

Confederation 

100

A theory of representation that holds that representatives should vote based on the views of their constituents 

Delegate Model

100

The numbers of years a person must reside in the U.S. to be eligible to run for President

14

100

A power given to the House of Representatives to charge the president with "Treason, Bribery, or other high Crimes and Misdemeanors". 

Impeachment

200

A moment of domestic turmoil which persuaded the U.S. to hold a Constitutional Convention in 1787.

Shays's Rebellion

200

A key part of the Bill of Rights which reserved powers for the states

Tenth Amendment

200

When congressional district lines are drawn in such a way as to disproportionally benefit one political party over another. 

Gerrymandering 

200

Powers which belong to the president because they can be inferred from the Constitution

Inherent Powers

200

A way that the minority party in the Senate can check the majority during floor debates. 

Filibuster 

300

An Enlightenment philosopher who wrote that life in the state of nature is "nasty, brutish, and short"

Thomas Hobbes

300
Sometimes described as "elastic", this part of the Constitution allows Congress to "stretch" the powers designated to them by the Constitution 

Necessary and Proper Clause

300

This important committee determines the amount of time a bill can be debated in the House of Representatives 

House Rules Committee

300

He is credited with creating the "modern presidency", in which the decision making of the president rather than congress assumed greater importance

Franklin D. Roosevelt 

300

A law passed by Congress in the 1970s to limit the President's authority to introduce American troops into foreign lands without Congressional approval. 

War Powers Resolution 

400

A plan at the Constitutional Convention which favored a one-house legislature with one vote for each state

The New Jersey Plan

400

The notion that state and national governments should be equally powerful 

Dual Federalism 

400

When members of congress trade votes

Logrolling

400

This addition to the Constitution allows the vice president and a majority of the Cabinet to permit the vice president to become acting president. 

Twenty-Fifth Amendment 

400

A power of the president, which once allowed the President to reject individual items in a spending bill

Line-item veto

500

An anonymous author who wrote in opposition to the Federalist Papers to oppose Federalism 

Brutus

500

A kind of fund which Congress appropriates for states, often requiring states to match federal funds. These have been used in the past to influence states' policies.

Categorical Grant 

500

This person from the majority party presides over the Senate in the absence of the vice president 

President Pro Tempore 

500

A protection Richard Nixon tried to invoke during the Watergate Scandal in order to ignore court orders

Executive Privilege 

500

This allows a President to sidestep the "advice and consent" of the Senate when making diplomatic arrangements with foreign nations. 

Executive Agreements