Foundations of American Democracy
Linkage Institutions
Legislative Branch
Executive Branch
Judicial Branch
Civil Rights & Liberties
100

The list of privileges that cannot be taken away from humans

Natural Rights (Bonus: What philosopher did Thomas Jefferson borrow this concept from?)

100

These lobby members of Congress to get them to write friendly laws for their constituents

What are interest groups?


100

This action can be taken by the minority party in the Senate to stop a vote on a bill

What is the filibuster?

100

The president has this title, which means that they are the leader of the US Armed Forces

What is Commander-in-Chief?

100

This describes the set of past decisions that inform current or future that SCOTUS takes on

What is precedent

100

This type of speech is non-verbal and expresses a viewpoint

Symbolic Speech
200

The government's power is divided into 3 different branches to keep them from having too much power

What is Separation of Powers? 

200

The name given to parties in the US besides the Democrats and Republicans

What is 'Third Party'? 
200

This process in the Senate is required whenever the president nominates a new official or secretary. 

What is 'Advice and Consent'?

200

The president can 'say no' to a bill and block its passage unless Congress overrides it with a 2/3 vote in both houses

What is a veto?

200

This term describes the term length for judges in the judicial branch (including lower courts)

What is life tenure? 

200

This test was established in Schenck vs United States to limit freedom of speech during wartime

What is 'Clear and Present Danger' Test

300

The government's power is divided into two different levels of government (Federal, State)

What is federalism? 

300

This type of election happens every 4 years when we are not electing a president

What is midterm election?

300

When the two chambers of Congress pass different versions of the law, it goes to this type of committee before reaching the President

What is a Conference Committee?

300

This describes when the President uses their public position to influence public opinion and negotiate with Congress

What is bully pulpit? 

300

Judges usually use past precedent to inform decisions

What is stare decisis? 

300

This prohibits the government from infringing on essential liberty interests

Substantive Due Process

400

The power of the government comes from the people

What is popular sovereignty? 

400

This type of system means that the person who gets the plurality of votes (the most votes) gets all of the representation from the state in the electoral college

What is "Winner-Take-All"?

400

This vote requires a supermajority (60/100) in the Senate to end a filibuster

What is a cloture vote?

400

This describes the complex series of agencies and departments that work for the President

Federal Bureaucracy

400

Judges can use their power to change the laws and interpret them to allow the United States to be better than it was in the past

What is judicial activism? 
400

This is the process of forcing the Bill of Rights to apply to the states, not just the federal government

Selective Incorporation

500

James Madison worried about these causing 'mischief' and taking away the rights of minorities

What are factions? 

500

This phenomenon means that the person who currently holds the office is more likely to win than a challenger

What is 'Incumbency Advantage'?


500

This type of spending in Congress's budget is required by law, and cannot be negotiated. 

What is mandatory spending? 

500

This type of power describes all of the things the president can do that aren't in the Constitution or implied by it (Signing statements, executive orders, bully pulpit, 

What are informal powers?

500

This concept refers to the idea that the justices and judges should not be affected by current politics

Judicial independence

500

This 'right' is not listed anywhere in the constitution, but is implied by the 1st, 4th, and 9th amendment

What is the right to privacy?