The Creator
The Enforcer
The Judge
The Loathed
Perfectly Balanced as All Things Should Be
100

This type of committee, such as the House Rules Committee, is permanent and specializes in a specific area of policy.

What is a standing committee?

100

The president’s power to reject a bill passed by Congress is known as this.

What is a veto?

100

The number of justices who currently serve on the U.S. Supreme Court.

What is nine?

100

These are TWO "powers" given to agencies, allowing them to create regulations and enforce them as if they were law.

What are rule-making authority and (delegated) discretionary authority?

100

Congress can check the president by doing this to override a veto.

What is a two-thirds vote in both houses?

200

This is the process of redistributing House seats among the states every ten years after the census.

What is reapportionment?

200

This Amendment explains the process by which the vice president and a majority of the Cabinet can declare the president unable to perform duties.

What is the 25th Amendment?

200

This landmark case established the power of judicial review.

What is Marbury v. Madison (1803)?

200

This Department in bureaucracy helps form national transportation policy and oversee safety of air and rail travel, as well as assist states in building new highway systems and develop programs for improvement of public transportation systems.

What is the Department of Transportation?

200

This is the part of the government that can accuse the president of wrongdoing, potentially leading to removal through impeachment.

What is the House of Representatives?

300

$400: When members of Congress trade votes to secure the passage of legislation, it is known as this practice.

What is logrolling?

300

This office, within the Executive Office of the President, helps prepare the president’s annual budget proposal.

What is the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)?

300

The principle that courts should follow precedent when making decisions.

What is stare decisis?

300

The term for when bureaucratic agencies, interest groups, and congressional committees form close policy-making relationships.

What is an iron triangle?

300

This power allows Congress to oversee the executive branch and its agencies and Departments by conducting investigations and hearings.

What is congressional oversight?

400

This Supreme Court case ruled that racial gerrymandering is unconstitutional under the Equal Protection Clause.

What is Shaw v. Reno (1993)?

400

This type of agreement between the president and a foreign leader does not require Senate approval, unlike a treaty.

What is an executive agreement?

400

This type of court has original jurisdiction, meaning it is the first to hear a case.

What is a district court?

400

The term for when government agencies, congressional committees, and interest groups collaborate on policy-making.

What is an issue network?

400

The Senate confirms these TWO types of presidential appointments with a majority vote.

What are federal judges/Supreme Court justices and heads of Cabinet/Department/Agency?

500

These are the two names for this clause in Article I, Section 8, allows Congress to pass laws that are “necessary and proper” to carry out its enumerated powers.

What is the Necessary and Proper Clause (Elastic Clause)?

500

This Supreme Court case limited the president’s use of executive privilege during the Watergate scandal.

What is United States v. Nixon (1974)?

500

The judicial philosophy that believes courts should defer to elected branches and only strike down laws when they clearly violate the Constitution.

What is judicial restraint?

500

This act established the merit system, a system of hiring government employees based on merit rather than political connections.

What is the Pendleton Act (1883)?

500

Congress can check the judiciary by altering the number of these, which determine how many courts exist below the Supreme Court.

What are lower federal courts?