Congress: Representation & Structure
Congress: Lawmaking & Powers
The Presidency: Powers & Institutions
The Presidency: Growth of Power
The Federal Courts & Judicial Review
100

Congress is composed of two chambers, making it what kind of legislature?

Bicameral legislature

100

The committee that decides how and when bills will be debated in the House of Representatives

The House Rules Committee

100

The president’s constitutional role as the highest military authority

Commander in chief

100

The practice of presidents appealing directly to the public to gain support for their policies

Going public

100

The two broad categories of law in the U.S. legal system

Criminal law and civil law

200

The two models of representation in Congress—acting on behalf of constituents’ wishes or using independent judgment—are known as what?

Delegate and trustee models

200

A tactic in the Senate used to delay or block legislative action by refusing to yield the floor.

Filibuster

200

The president’s power to forgive individuals for federal crimes

The power to grant reprieves, pardons, and amnesty

200

The 1973 law intended to limit presidential war powers, often ignored by presidents

The War Powers Resolution

200

Courts that hear a case first have this type of jurisdiction

Original jurisdiction

300

When representatives share demographic traits with their constituents, such as race or gender, it’s called what?

Descriptive representation

300

The vote threshold needed in both chambers to override a presidential veto

Two-thirds vote in both the House and Senate

300

Powers granted to the president by Congress are called what?

Delegated powers

300

Executive actions that have the force of law without congressional approval

Executive orders

300

The Supreme Court case that established judicial review

Marbury v. Madison (1803)

400

The manipulation of district boundaries to favor one group or party

Gerrymandering

400

The “regular order” of lawmaking has increasingly been replaced by this modern, leadership-controlled process

Unorthodox lawmaking

400

The president’s claim that communications with advisers should remain confidential

Executive privilege

400

The president’s formal rejection of a bill passed by Congress

Veto (or pocket veto if unsigned in the final 10 days of session)

400

The “rule of four” refers to how many justices must vote to hear a Supreme Court case

Four justices

500

The percentage of incumbents who typically win reelection is very high, largely because of advantages such as this

Incumbency advantage (resources, name recognition, and constituency service)

500

Congressional power to conduct hearings and investigations into how the executive branch enforces laws

Oversight

500

The group of key agencies and offices that help manage the executive branch, including the OMB and Council of Economic Advisers

The Executive Office of the President (EOP)

500

Two main ways modern presidents have expanded their power

Popular mobilization (“going public”) and expanding administrative power

500

The judicial philosophy that emphasizes following the original intent of the Constitution

Judicial restraint (or originalism)