Chapter 6 Interest Groups and Lobbying
Political Action Committee (PAC)
a private group that raises and distributes funds for use in election campaigns
Individuals have the best chance to influence public policy when they
a. are not opposed by organized interest groups
When interest groups combine small contributions from many sources to form one large contribution, it is called
a. bundling
Trial lawyers are which type of interest group?
a. professional group
lobbyist
an individual employed by an interest group who tries to influence governmental decisions on behalf of that group
interest group
an organization established to influence the government's programs and policies
One of the most important grassroots tactics of interest groups is
b. to get out the vote
The "8F Crowd"
b. was a group of extremely wealthy Texans who met in Suite 8F of the Lamar Hotel in Houston and con- trolled Texas politics for 40 years
In Texas, the most powerful interest groups represent which interests?
c business
Interest groups often hire former legislators as lobbyists to
d. all of the above
Dark money refers to
donated money that does not have to be reported by a campaign
The most important thing interest groups need to be effective is
e. access to politicians
PACs are used to
e. all of the above
interest groups have an advantage over individuals in influencing policy because interest groups usually have
e. all of the above
Interest groups provide public officials with all the following except
e. committee assignments
The goals of the interest groups include all except
e. maintaining a heterogeneous membership
interest-group capture
government agency that serves the objectives of the interests that the agency is supposed to regulate
Lobbyists are
important sources of information for legislators
issue advocacy
independent spending by individuals or interest groups on a campaign issue but not directly tied to a particular candidate
Dark Money
political money where the donors of the money do not have to be disclosed
free rider problem
the incentive to benefit from others' work without making a contribution, which leads individuals in a collective action situation to refuse to work together
Bundling
the interest-group practice of combining campaign contributions from several sources into one larger contribution from the group, so as to increase the group's impact on the candidate
Capture theory refers to the idea that
through long-term relationships, government interests come to serve the objectives of an interest group