Government Officials
Voting & Elections
Media & Political Parties
Congress
Presidency
100

Secretary of Defense

Pete Hegseth

100

the means by which electoral votes are divided between candidates based on who wins districts and/or the state

district system

100

the process of giving a news story a specific context or background

framing

100

the body of voters represented by a particular politician

constituency

100

the act of charging a government official with serious wrongdoing, which in some cases may lead to the removal of that official from office

impeachment

200

Chief Justice of the Supreme Court

John Roberts

200

the practice of voting only for candidates from the same party

straight-ticket voting

200

the media’s ability to choose which issues or topics get attention

agenda setting
200

a special type of committee that reconciles different bills passed in the House and Senate so a single bill results

conference committee

200

a rule issued by the president without the cooperation of Congress and having the force of law

executive order

300

Secretary of State

Marco Rubio

300

the result when a popular presidential candidate helps candidates from the same party win their own elections

coattail effect

300

a party-based election rule in which the number of seats a party receives is a function of the share of votes it receives in an election

proportional representation

300

the amending and voting process in a congressional committee

markup

300

a power created through law in 1996 and overturned by the Supreme Court in 1998 that allowed the president to reject specific aspects of bills passed by Congress while signing into law what remained

line-item veto

400

Senate Majority Leader

John Thune

400

a form of candidate nomination that occurs in a town-hall style format rather than a day-long election

caucus

400

a type of election in which the winning candidate must receive at least 50 percent of the votes, even if a run-off election is required

majoritarian voting

400

a parliamentary maneuver used in the Senate to extend debate on a piece of legislation as long as possible, typically with the intended purpose of obstructing or killing it

filibuster

400

the president’s right to withhold information from Congress, the judiciary, or the public

executive privilege

500

Secretary of the Treasury

Scott Bessent

500

a party member chosen to represent a particular candidate at the party’s state- or national-level nominating convention

delegate

500

the idea that information is placed in a citizen’s brain and accepted

hypodermic theory
500

a parliamentary process to end a debate in the Senate, as a measure against the filibuster; invoked when three-fifths of senators vote for the motion

cloture

500

a statement a president issues with the intent to influence the way a specific bill the president signs should be enforced

signing statement