Going to Vote
Voter Choice
Linkage Institutions
Elections/ Media
Money
100

1. amendment that expanded voting rights to African American men

2. amendment that expanded voting rights to women

15

19

100

A person who believes their vote doesn't matter would have low

political efficacy

100

What is a linkage institution?

something that connects the people to the government
100

Explain the difference between an open and closed primary

open= any registered voter 

closed= only people registered with that party

100
Where do most of the campaign contributions in the US go to? (3)

1. candidates

2. parties

3. independent expenditure groups

200

Lowered the voting age to 18

26

200
Identify the group that is least likely to go vote

18-21 year olds

200

What are the 4 examples of linkage institutions?

Political parties, interest groups, elections, media

200

When is the nominee for president of each party announced?

at their national convention

200

Why is campaign spending protected by the first amendment?

because money = speech

300

Individuals who decide whether the party or candidate in power should be reelected based on the recent past

retrospective voter

300

Which candidate will have the best choice of getting elected?

Bob: ugly

Tim: good looking

Tim

300

Which of the following is not a way interest groups achieve their goals?

lobbying, litigation, candidate recruitment, legislation, electioneering

candidate recruitment (political parties)

300

Why does an incumbent have an easier time winning elections? (at least 2 reasons)

experienced in winning, stronger name recognition, history of decision making, army of volunteers, easier time getting $$$

300

Identify ONE loophole to campaign spending regulations

soft money, 527 groups, 501c groups, super pacs

400

How would voter ID laws be a structural barrier?

those without ID would not be able to vote

400

This type of election will see the highest voter turn out

general/national/presidential

400

How has the role the political party plays in selecting a candidate for election changed?

changed from very party centered to very candidate centered... the role of the party in selecting a candidate has weakened due to social media and technology they kind of have to pick the candidate that is already popular with the people

400

The media's role in uncovering scandals and holding officials accountable is known as being the 

watchdog!

400

What is one main difference between PACs and Super PACs?

PAC- can donate directly to candidate, strict contribution limits ($5000)

Super PAC - cannot donate directly to candidate, can accept unlimited donations, spend on "independent expenditures" (ads)

500

explain what a structural barrier is and give one example besides voter ID

a policy or law that prevents people from voting 

(polling hours, voting laws in specific states, availability of absentee ballots, ballot complexity, etc)

500

Explain one factor that might impact a person's choice in who they vote for?

Party ID/Ideological affiliation - vote for the party they are registered with 

Contemporary Political Issues - care about what is important at the time & make decision on how each candidate will handle it

Candidate Characteristics - well liked? good looking? personality?

Demographics - a person's race, religion, gender, etc

500

Why do third party candidates not stand a chance? (2 reasons)

winner-take-all voting districts -- whoever wins the popular vote takes all the votes, so a third party candidate who gains a lot of votes/support really stands no chance 

incorporation of 3rd party agendas into the two major parties platforms -- dem/rep will steal the popular ideas of a 3rd party candidate and incorporate them into their own agenda, effectively stealing votes from them

500
What is the "horse race" effect? How does this impact elections?

It is the effect of media outlets reporting on polling numbers... it can turn elections into popularity contests where more qualified candidates struggle for attention

500

CITIZENS UNITED V FEC

1. background

2. ruling

3. legacy

1. Hillary the movie comes out within 60 days of an election. CU gets sued for violating the FECA. case goes to SCOTUS

2. Corps and unions (such as CU) are "people" therefore spending cannot be limited and can spend unlimited amounts of money as long as it is not coordinated with a campaign

3. money = speech