Unit 1
Unit 2
Unit 3
Unit 4
Unit 5
100

A state oversteps its power by interfering with international trade.

What is placing a tax on furniture made overseas?

100

This action rewards political supporters with government jobs.

What is nominating a high-level campaign fund-raiser to serve as an ambassador to another nation?

100

This scenario violates the Fourteenth Amendment’s equal protection clause.

What is a public school system using race-based segregation?

100

Different poll results can occur because of how questions are phrased.

What is a difference in wording in the questions?

100

In this scenario, the public benefits from a group’s efforts without contributing.

What is the free-rider problem?

200

A constitutional feature limits what the national government can do.

What are the enumerated powers in Article I?

200

This move forces a vote when a bill is stuck in committee.

What is filing for a discharge petition?

200

This constitutional principle inspired themes in Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from a Birmingham Jail.”

What is the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment?

200

The credibility of a poll is improved when it reports this statistical measure.

What is the sampling error?

200

This important democratic function becomes harder without political parties.

What is educating the public about upcoming elections?

300

The framers designed Congress to pass laws slowly.

What is “slow and deliberate in the law-making process”?

300

A committee responds to problems by requiring officials to testify.

What is holding a hearing and subpoenaing high-level officials in the Department of Veterans Affairs to testify?

300

This type of case is most likely treated as involving a right to privacy.

What is a woman who is prevented from an abortion?

300

This policy can create tension between individualism and equality of opportunity.

What is implementing an affirmative action program?

300

This consequence of modern campaigns gives candidates an edge based on personal appeal.

What is candidates’ ability to appeal to voters outweighing experience and policy?

400

A federal power allowed Congress to regulate employer health-insurance options.

What is the power to regulate commerce among the states?

400

Presidents struggle to control policy because bureaucrats can’t be easily removed.

What is the challenge posed by civil service laws that protect professional bureaucrats?

400

This action by students would be protected as symbolic speech under the Tinker precedent.

What is wearing T-shirts objecting to a school board decision?

400

A president using Keynesian principles would respond to a recession with this approach.

What is increasing spending on unemployment benefits and public works projects?

400

This concept describes long-term cooperation among agencies, committees, and interest groups.

What are iron triangles?

500

Two agencies differ because one handles state issues and one handles national issues.

What is the distinction between the Department of Education and the Department of Homeland Security?

500

A president can limit the Court’s power by refusing to carry out its ruling.

What is refusing to enforce a ruling by the Court?

500

Supporters of Hamilton’s warning that a bill of rights could threaten liberty might reference this Supreme Court case.

What is Schenck v. United States (1919)?

500

This power allows Congress to influence the president’s agenda by controlling money and funding.

What is the power of the purse?

500

This factor explains higher voter turnout in presidential vs. midterm elections.

What is increased media coverage for presidential elections?