Political Parties
Voting and Political Participation
Public Opinion
Political Parties and Interest Groups
Media
100

The practice of awarding jobs, grants, licenses, or other special favors in exchange for political support.

What is patronage

100

A set of objectives outlining the party’s issue positions and priorities

Party platform


100

An amount that is allowed in case of miscalculation or change of circumstances.

Margin of Error

100

An interest group or its division that can raise money to contribute to campaigns or spend on ads in support of candidates.

Political Action Committees (PACs)

100

Release of secret information by anonymous government officials to the media.

What is a leak

200

There are two types of primary elections they are?

What is a closed primary and an open primary

200

A citizen’s loyalty to a specific political party.

Party identification


200

______ refers to what the public thinks about a particular issues or set of issues at any point in time and _______ are interviews/surveys that are used to estimate the feelings/beliefs of the entire population.

What is public opinion and public opinion polls

200

What is the difference between an interest group and a political party?

What is an interest group is a collection of people or organizations that tries to influence public policy whereas a political party covers a broader range of issues and appeal to a wider range of individuals

200

Specific locations from which news frequently emanates, such as Congress or the White House

What is a beat

300

A ballot prepared and distributed by government officials that places the names of all candidates on a single list and is filled out by voters in private.

What is an Australian Ballot

300

Voting for the party in control, or “in-party” when one thinks the government is performing well; voting for the outs when one thinks the government is performing poorly.

What is performance voting

300

The influence on the public’s general impressions caused by positive or negative coverage of a candidate or issue

Priming


300

Benefits that can motivate participation in a group effort because they are available only to those who participate.

Selective incentives


300

Government censorship of information before it is published

What is prior restraint

400

The principle that asserts that plurality rule elections structured within single member districts tends to favor a two party system

Duverger’s Law


400

Voting for candidates based on their positions on specific issues, as opposed to their party or personal characteristics.

What is issue voting

400

Name three agents of political socialization

What are demographics, family, school, peers, mass media, political leaders

400

When political elites seek to mobilize and manipulate grassroots support on an issue.

What is astro-turf campaign

400

a sensational style of reporting characterized newspapers at the turn of the century

What is Yellow Journalism

500

This term refers to a ballot in which candidates of different political parties are on the same ballot

Ticket Splitting

500

When a small number of ordinary citizens are observed as they talk with each other about political candidates, issues and events this is refereed to as a?

What is a focus group

500

The increased short-run popular support of the President during periods of international crisis or war.

Rally around the flag effect


500

A lobbying strategy that relies on participation by group members, such as a protest or letter-writing campaign.

Grassroots lobbying. 


500

This is a term discribing the results of Superfical coverage in televison has led to a massive shortening of politicans speaches (from 47 seconds in 1960 to 7 seconds today).

What is a Sound Bite