Key Terms
Economic Policy
Politicians and Polling
Political Ideology
Random!
100

An organization that seeks political power by electing people to office so that its beliefs about government become public policy.

What is a Political Party 

100

Advocates minimal government involvement. Focus is on overall productivity, not inequalities

What is the Laissez-Faire economics?

100
Candidates use these to understand public preferences
What are polls?
100

Political Ideology that has distrust of the government, has greater faith in private enterprise and  free markets. They favor a larger military and a more assertive pursuit of national self-interest.

Conservative Ideology

100
A coherent set of values and beliefs about public policy.
What is political ideology.
200

The process of reallocating seats in the House of Representatives every 10 years on the basis of the census results.

What is reapportionment?

200

If businesses are struggling and there are few jobs, it is the government’s responsibility to step in. The government should spend money to help create jobs and improve businesses.

What is Keynesian Economics?

200

A small group of citizens (10-40 people) gathered to converse about candidates or issues., allowing for deeper conversation and insight into a topic through follow up questions and body language study.

What is a focus group?

200

Political ideology that promotes a theory of government is to protect people’s well-being. Need for a strong central government to “smooth out the rough edges of capitalism.”

What is the liberal ideology

200

Activities used by citizens to influence the selection of political leaders or the policy they pursue. The most common form of this in a demoracy is voting.

What is political participation?

300
The process through which individuals in society acquire political attitudes, views, and knowledge, based on inputs from family, schools, the media and others
What is political socialization?
300

The way that the federal government spends its money. Proposed by the President, amended and approved by Congress, then approved ultimately by the President.

What is the Federal Budget?

300
Phenomena seen in most Presidential terms in which the President ends with a lower approval rating than when they started.
What are falling approval ratings.
300

A list of principle and plans a party hopes to enact that reveals why each party has a unique following of voters. Revised during every presidential election at the party’s national convention.

What is a Party Platform

300

proposal by the citizens that is put on the ballot during an election for direct citizen vote for approval or denial

What is an initiative

400
Relatively small proportion of people who are chosen in a survey so as to be representative of the whole group being studied.
What is a sample?
400

The key measure of inflation determine by the price of a fixed basket of goods over time.

What is Consumer Price Index?

400

Polls where the questioning is worded to lead the respondent toward a certain response, whether positive or negative. Rather than surveying the whole population, these seek to influence public thinking.

What is a push-poll?

400

Third largest party in the United States; founded in 1971 by people who felt that the Republican and Democratic parties no longer represented the true intentions of the founders; favoring  limited government intervention in personal, social, and economic issues

Who are Libertarians

400

A political system in which, in theory, ownership of all land and productive facilities is in the hands of the people, and all goods are equally shared. The production and distribution of goods are controlled by an authoritarian government.

What is communism?

500
The science of population changes
What is demography?
500

Affect Presidential Elections and can result in presidential approval ratings to decline

What is poor economy and high unemployment rates?

500

Survey the opinions of respondents on any number of topics. They can measure respondents’ approval or disapproval of public figures, whether that’s politicians or celebrities. They can also measure opinions on issues, such as gun control or a carbon tax.

What are Public Opinion Polls 

500

the fourth largest party in the United States; founded in 2001, favors a strong federal government; these candidates often run on a platform of grassroots democracy, nonviolence, social justice, and environmentalism.

What is the Green Party

500

a proposal by the citizens to repeal a law that is in existence and is voted on directly by the citizens on the ballot

What is a referendum?