Constitutional Compromises
Public Opinion and Socialization
Parties and Elections
Links to government
Media and influence
100

This critical agreement resolved the structural fight between large and small states by designing a two-house legislature with one house based on population and the other granting equal votes.

What is the Great Compromise?

100

Statistically, this foundational social unit serves as the primary and most powerful agent of political socialization for an individual before they ever enter formal schooling.

What is the family?

100

This official, formal document is drafted by a political party to outline its core policy goals, beliefs, and positions on major national issues

What is a party platform?

100

These organized collections of individuals share specialized policy goals and actively lobby the political system to influence legislation in their favor.

What are interest groups?

100

This crucial media power describes how news organizations choose which stories to cover, effectively deciding what issues the public and politicians focus on.

What is agenda-setting?

200

This controversial Constitutional Convention compromise determined how enslaved populations would be counted for both congressional seat allocation and state taxation.

What is the Three-Fifths Compromise?

200

This core concept represents an individual's psychological belief that their vote actually matters and that they can genuinely influence the political system.

What is political efficacy?

200

This constitutional amendment lowered the legal voting age across the United States to 18 years old.

What is the 26th Amendment?

200

Translating directly to "friend of the court," this legal brief is submitted to the Supreme Court by an outside group to provide specialized information and expert arguments.

What is an amicus curiae brief?

200

This historical, late 19th-century brand of reporting utilized heavily sensationalized, exaggerated, and sometimes fabricated headlines to sell newspapers.

What is yellow journalism?

300

Under the Articles of Confederation, this major fiscal structural failure left the central national government perpetually broke and dependent on state charity.

What is inability to levy taxes?

300

This mathematical method gives every single individual within a target population an equal structural chance of being selected, ensuring a poll is unbiased and highly reliable.

What is random sampling?

300

This structural feature of the US electoral system acts as a major institutional barrier to third parties by giving an entire district's seat exclusively to the candidate who wins the most votes.

What is a single-member plurality (winner take all) system?

300

This stable, sub-governmental alliance consists of three specific actors: a congressional committee, an executive agency, and an outside interest group.

What is an iron triangle?

300

This iconic, televised 1960 political event proved for the first time that visual appearance and medium could fundamentally warp how the public perceived presidential candidates.

What is the Kennedy-Nixon debate?

400

This specific term describes a legislative body that is structurally split into two separate houses or chambers.

What is a bicameral legislature?

400

This free-market economic philosophy firmly advocates for minimal government regulation, intervention, or meddling in financial markets.

What is laissez-faire?

400

Statistically, these two specific socio-economic demographic factors are the strongest predictors of an individual's likelihood to actually go out and vote.

What are education and income level (or socioeconomic status)?

400

Inside an iron triangle, this specific actor relies heavily on interest groups for industry data and counts on congressional committees for their annual budget approvals.

What are bureaucratic/executive agencies?

400

This modern corporate media trend triggers deep democratic worries because it shrinks the overall diversity of viewpoints and severely damages local news coverage.

What is media consolidation?

500

These highly intense public and political arguments erupted across the states immediately following the 1787 Convention regarding whether to formally adopt the new Constitution.

What are the ratification debates?

500

This term describes a society’s deeply ingrained, shared collection of beliefs, traditions, and values—such as individualism and the rule of law—that dictate civic behavior.

What is political culture?

500

This term describes an individual's self-proclaimed, long-term psychological loyalty or alignment with a specific political party.

What is party identification?

500

These are collections of people that connect the public to government activity (such as interest groups or political parties)

What are linkage institutions?

500

This specific term refers to the deliberate action of slanting news coverage or framing reports to subtly or overtly support one political party or ideology.

What is partisan bias?