(in Congress)
A legislative district like the one pictured is an example of this practice, often done for party advantage.

What is gerrymandering?
Under the Articles of Confederation, this number of states had to agree to pass any laws
What is 9? (or 3/5)
Article VI includes this clause, which declares the power of the Constitution and federal government as the highest in the land.
What is the Supremacy Clause?
In a democracy, the government's power comes from this.
Who are the people?
If the federal government wanted to maintain more control, they would provide the states with this type of funding
What are categorical grants?
These are two advantages of being the majority party, beyond the numerical advantage in voting
What are greater committee membership, hold committee chair positions, Speaker of the House, set agenda, etc.?
These are two weaknesses of the Articles of Confederation
What are: no power to tax, no power to regulate trade, no national judiciary, no power to draft an army, etc.?
This is the name for powers that belong only to state governments.
What are reserved powers?
When the Supreme Court rules a law passed by Congress is unconstitutional, it is demonstrating this principle.
What is checks and balances?
A state was just given a grant of money to be used for the broad purpose of transportation. That state was just given this type of grant.
What are block grants?
The policy-making process may be drawn out when the president and Congress represent different parties, otherwise known by this term.
What is divided government?
This major change to the Constitution was demanded by anti-federalists during ratification.
What is adding a Bill of Rights?
This part of government has the power to declare war.
What is Congress?
Americans generally support this kind of equality more than equality of results.
What is equal opportunity?
Congress often fails to pass a comprehensive budget, opting instead to "kick the can down the road" by passing these.
What are continuing resolutions?
These individuals are the mouthpieces for their parties and help direct the agenda
Who are Party/Floor Leaders?
This Constitutional principle states that the government derives their power from the consent of the governed.
What is popular sovereignty?
The Supreme Court ruled that presidents do NOT have this specific kind of veto power, although some state governors do.
What is line-item veto?
The two-step process involved in proposing and ratifying formal amendments is a clear example of this Constitutional principle.
What is federalism?
What is the House?
If the minority party wishes to stall or kill a bill in the Senate, they might use this tactic
What is a filibuster?
Not directly mentioned in the Constitution, it took the case Marbury v. Madison to solidify this implied Constitutional principle
What is judicial review?
These powers, such as immigration control, are issued to the national government simply due to the fact that they are the head of a sovereign state
What are inherent powers?
What is limited government?
This term describes the practice of the national government distributing a percentage of their income to the states
What is revenue sharing?