Public Opinion
Voting & Elections
Media
Political Parties
Interest Groups
100

This man is credited with inventing the modern public opinion survey

Who is George Gallup?

100

This is the belief that one's political participation really matters

What is political efficacy?

100

This is the nickname given to FDR's radio speeches in which he explained his ideas and actions directly to the people

What are fireside chats?

100

First identified by political scientist V. O. Key, these are the three components or facets of political parties

What are party-in-the-electorate, party organization, and party-in-office (government)?

100

Interest groups must find ways to overcome this phenomenon in which people are inclined to reap the benefits of the group's work without actually contributing to the group's efforts

What is the free rider problem?

200

This is ideologically slanted information presented as unbiased information in order to influence public opinion

What is covert content?

200

These are organizations created to raise and spend money to influence political campaigns and public policy

What are Political Action Committees (PACs)?

200

This is the name originally given to tabloid-style newspapers that focused on sensational images and scandalous headlines

What is yellow journalism?

200

This is the term used to describe the increasing dissimilarity in ideological views between Democrats and Republicans

What is partisan polarization?

200

This type of incentive appeals to someone's concern about a cause

What is a purposive incentive?

300

This branch of government is least susceptible to making decisions based on public opinion polls

What is the Supreme Court?

300

This state became the first to automatically register all citizens over the age of 18 to vote.

What is Oregon?

300

The media play this role by choosing which topics or issues deserve widespread public attention

What is agenda setting?

300

Political parties are distinguished from interest groups largely because they do this one thing that interest groups do not

What is run members for elective office?

300

The political scientist E.E. Schattschneider criticized this theory for not recognizing interest groups generally represent those who are well-off

What is pluralist theory?

400
This phenomenon was first observed when campaign polls overestimated the level of support for an African American candidate due to people not wanting to give 'politically incorrect' responses to pollsters.

What is the Bradley Effect?

400

48 states plus the District of Columbia award electoral votes for president on this basis

What is winner-take-all?

400

These two presidential rivals were the first to make widespread use of the partisan press to spread scandalous gossip about one another during the campaign.

Who are John Adams and Thomas Jefferson?

400

This is the type of election in which only registered party members can vote to choose the party's nominee for an elected office

What is a closed primary?

400
Someone who meets with government decision makers to advocate on behalf of a group he or she works for is known as this

What is an in-house lobbyist?

500

According to Jonathan Haidt, these are the two channels of morality generally recognized by liberals

What are harm/care and fairness/reciprocity?

500

This demographic factor is the strongest predictor of whether a citizen will turn out to vote

What is education level?

500

The emergence of the professional press was marked by the founding of the first school of journalism at this university

What is Columbia?

500

Countries with this type of electoral system award legislative seats based upon the share of votes each party receives

What is proportional representation?

500

This theory holds that external events or shocks can lead to interest group mobilization

What is disturbance theory?