Judicial Branch
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100

What is Judicial Review

The ability of the judicial branch to decide the constitutionality of the actions taken by other branches

100
Congress has two houses- the House of Representatives and the Senate. This type of system is called what

Bicameral 

100
List two of the roles of the president 

Head of Party

Chief of State

Commander in Chief 

Chief Diplomat 

100

What branch is focused on in Fed 70 

Executive

100

Practice of redrawing voting districts to favor one party over another 

(NC is notorious for this) 

Gerrymandering 

200

Define "strict constructionist" 

A judge who interprets the constitution in its original context with little to no additional interpretation

200

Define the Power of the Purse

Ability of Congress to allocate money to departments and projects 

200

Who is in the President's Cabinet?

Appointed heads of departments (15 in total)

200

IN WHICH FED PAPER did Hamilton argue that the Judicial Branch was the least dangerous and least powerful branch of government but emphasize the importance of judicial review?

Fed 78

200

This SC case ruling held that voting districts cannot be drawn to racially segregate voters and this practice of racial gerrymandering violates the 14th amendment. (hint- this case originated in North Carolina) 

Shaw v Reno 

300

In what way does the judicial branch perform a "check" on the other two branches? 

Judicial Review

300

How does the Senate wield the Advice and Consent power (1 example) 

Approving or rejecting appointments, declaring war or foreign treaties, impeaching a president 

300

Define the power of the Bully Pulpit

The ability of the President to influence society using their platform 

300

Define an "energetic" executive as Hamilton advocates for in Fed 70 and explain why he says it is important. 

A singular flexible and powerful head executive who can act quicker and more responsive than the other branches. They can act in and out of the bureaucracy. This will keep down infighting, factions and anarchy. 

300

This SC case re affirmed the "one person one vote" doctrine that all votes should be counted equally and not favored over others. This ruling relied on the 14th amendment. 

(hint- this is about gerrymandering) 

Baker v Carr 

400
What is the process by which someone is appointed to the Supreme Court? (4 steps) 

President chooses someone 

Senate investigates their qualifications 

Senate hearing with the appointee

Senate confirms or denies

400

_______ spending is required in the federal budget, while ____________ spending is flexible.  

Mandatory, Discretionary 

400

Give one specific example of an "Energetic Executive" 

Easiest answers would be executive orders, signing statements, bully pulpit or pardons

400

Where in the Constitution will you find the powers of the President outlined? 

Article II

400

Marbury v Madison establishes what important concept? 

Judicial Review or Original Jurisdiction (JR is more important) 

500

Define Judicial Activism 

When the SC acts to MAKE a law 

500

This type of committee combines members from both the House and the Senate to do management or research 

Joint Committee 

500

Give two ways that the President "checks" the power of the legislative branch. 

Veto or pocket veto, executive orders, bully pulpit

500

How does Hamilton argue in FAVOR of lifetime judicial appointments for federal judges? (2 points) 

Consistency in rulings, keeps judges from making decisions just to get votes to keep their seat (impartiality) 

500

Identify and describe the two ways that gerrymandering takes place. 

Cracking- breaking up voter blocks to dissolve their power

Packing- stuffing a voting block together to consolidate its power