AP Government Chapters 6-9
Which of the following is consistent with the mandate theory of elections?
Barack Obama's claim that his victory in the 2012 election means that the public wants to raise taxes on the wealthy.
Which of the following is a consequence of the rise of television broadcasting?
Candidates are more capable of running for office on their own by appealing to people directly through TV.
How does civil disobedience differ from a protest?
Civil disobedience involves intentionally breaking a law; a protest involves intentionally getting attention from the media.
Which of the following best describes Barack Obama's campaign message in the 2012 election?
"I did as well as could have been expected under the circumstances"
Which of the following statements indicates a high level of political efficacy?
"one vote can make a difference; i want my vote to be the difference maker."
Some people have called the American electoral process
"the permanent campaign"
In 2012, the amount an individual is legally allowed to contribute to a candidate's campaign was
$2,500
How many states employ a winner-take-all system in which all their electors are awarded to the presidential candidate who wins the most votes statewide?
48
Donations to ________ groups do not have to be reported unless a donor gives money specifically for a political ad.
501(c)
The 2008 election was the first time that ______ voted at the same rate as whites.
African Americans
Which demographic group currently most closely identifies with the Democratic Party?
African Americans
What is the effect of aging on political participation?
Aging increases political participation
Which of the following was one of the requirements of the Federal Election Campaign Act?
All candidates for federal office must disclose who contributed money to their campaigns
In comparison with citizens of most other established democracies around the world, how are Americans different?
Americans are less likely than citizens of other democracies to report that they have participated in protests.
In 1934, Congress created which body to regulate the use of airwaves?
Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
Which president forged the New Deal coalition?
Franklin Roosevelt
If the president was selected by popular vote instead of by the Electoral College, which of the following cities would a presidential campaign be least likely to visit?
Green Bay, Wisconsin
If no candidate receives an Electoral College majority, the election is decided in the
House of Representatives
What is the most common reason given for not voting by US citizens who are registered to vote?
It's hard to take time off of work or school
Which statement best describes the functioning of party machines in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries?
Parties provided jobs to urban electorates in exchange for votes and kickbacks.
The years 1860-1928 saw the ascendancy of which party?
Republicans
What 2012 candidate lost momentum when he could not remember the names of the three federal cabinet departments he would eliminate?
Rick Perry
Which of the following helps to explain why voter turnout is lower in the US than in other democracies?
The US hold elections midweek.
Of the following statements about the 1936 Literary Digest poll, which predicted Roosevelt's defeat for reelection, which is true?
The poll oversampled the upper middle class and the wealthy.
What is demography?
The science of human populations
Why do presidential candidates tend to focus their efforts on battleground states?
The winner-take-all system makes battleground states more relevant to a campaign.
Suppose your candidate is in a tight election campaign and has limited time and money. What expenditures would pay off best in gaining electoral votes?
You should spend both time and money in battleground states that may go for either party.
Which of the following is a consequence of the rise of narrowcasting?
Young adults are less likely than other age groups to use newspapers and broadcast media as news and information sources.
Which of the following is the best definition of protest?
a form of political participation designed to achieve policy change through dramatic and unconventional tactics
The "minimal effects hypothesis" suggests that the media have which of the following?
a marginal effect on public opinion
What is an event called that is purposely staged for the media and that is significant just because the media are there?
a media event
An investment candidates today MUST make is in
a staff to set up and run technologies such as Facebook and Twitter accounts
Which of the following best describes how Mitt Romney presented himself in the 2012 presidential election?
a successful businessman who can apply his skills to fixing the economy
The media's emphasis on the country's slow economic growth in 1992, rather than the good news of low inflation and interest rates, helped set the stage for Bill Clinton's win over the incumbent president, George H. W. Bush. This is an example of what?
agenda setting
Increasing public attention to specific problems is a core feature of the media's _________ power.
agenda-setting
You run the US Census Bureau and are interested in improving the response rate of communities that are usually undercounted. Which of the following actions would best help you achieve your goal?
attempting to reach a non responsive households by telephone and by door-to-door canvassing in English and in Spanish
Why is participation in the census so important?
because the information the census collects helps to determine how more than $400 billion of federal funding each year is spent
Which of the following is a cost of voting?
becoming informed
Why is it sometimes difficult for citizens to engage in policy voting?
candidates can be intentionally vague about their issue stances
Television has enabled voters to rely less on political parties and social groups to make their decisions about candidates and more on their own assessment. According to the text, this is because television allows
candidates to be seen up close and personal
"Letter from a Birmingham Jail," penned by Martin Luther King, Jr., in 1963, is a classic defense of which form of political protest?
civil disobedience
A __________ often requires voters to declare party affiliation on their voter registration forms, which for political parties is something akin to the government collecting information for them about who likes their product.
closed primary
When can a party change its platform?
during the national party convention
What must precede a major-party realignment?
economic crises
If the poor participated at higher levels in the political process, what might happen?
government programs to alleviate economic inequality would likely be higher on the political agenda
Party dealignment is associated with a rising number of
independents
The voters most likely to engage in ticket splitting are
independents
The Electoral College introduces a bias into the campaign and electoral process because
less populated states are overrepresented
Paradoxically, as technology has enabled the media to pass along information with greater speed, news coverage has become ________.
less thorough
Which of the following statements about the influence of education on political attitudes and behavior is false?
less-educated citizens are more likely to vote than better-educated citizens
From 1955 to 1976, Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daly ruled one of the most powerful political ________ in US history.
machines
Television, radio, newspapers, magazines, the Internet, and other forms of communication are collectively referred to as the
mass media
One impact of the Internet on political campaigns is that
more people are making political donations
The ___________ is the formal governing body of political parties.
national party convention
The Democratic and Republican candidates for president are formally nominated by the
national party conventions
One of the various ways in which parties contribute to the democratic governance is by
nominating candidates
Where do some critics place the blame for Americans' lack on political knowledge?
on Americans themselves, for not remembering much about what they are supposed to through the media
The official, though ambiguously written, party ________ is ratified by delegates and leaders at the national party convention every four years but given little serious attention.
platform
The issues that attract serious attention from public officials and other people actively involved in politics at the time are collectively referred to as ______ agenda.
policy
The US national chairpersons for the Republicans and the Democrats recently agreed that their biggest headache was
raising money
What technique is the key to the accuracy of public opinion polls?
random sampling
The McGovern-Fraser Commission made the delegate section process of the Democratic party more democratic by
requiring delegate selection procedures to be open
The primary interest of publicly owned media is _________; the primary interest of privately owned media is _________.
serving the public interest; making a profit
The appearance and increase in _________ was an unintended result of an amendment in 1979 to the original Campaign Reform Act, which allows parties to raise and spend money on voter registration and other campaign materials without limits on spending or the size of contributions that they can accept.
soft money
The loyal opposition in the era of Democratic President Andrew Jackson was the Whig Party, made up of two distinct factions, ____________.
southern planters and northern industrialists
Which states tend to have higher voter turnout?
states with Election Day voter registration
In states with caucuses, _________.
supports of candidates attend a series of open meetings to express presidential preferences.
With politicians relying on journalists to get out their message, and journalists relying on politicians to keep them in the know, their relationship can best be defined as which of these?
symbiotic
Because states are the key battlegrounds of campaigns, candidates often find themselves
tailoring their appeals to the particular interests of a state
The cozy relationship between politicians and the press in the twentieth century lasted until when?
the Vietnam War and Watergate
The textbook discusses three important agents that can socialize Americans to participate in the political process. What are they?
the media, the schools, and the family
Which sector of the economy do conservatives generally favor as the source of solutions to solve America's policy concerns?
the private sector
According to many network executives, many in the American public are not well informed in this high-tech age because of
their own personal choice
What major concern did the 2000 presidential election between Gore and Bush highlight regarding the role of third parties?
third parties' spoiler role in elections
Reapportionment occurs once a decade, after every census. Why?
to reallocate seats in the House of Representatives, based on each state's proportion of the population
If you were running a campaign with a relatively unknown candidate, you would want to allow plenty of time for your candidate to
travel extensively in Iowa before the caucuses
An intentional news leak for the purpose of assessing the political reaction to that news is called a
trial balloon
Which of the following makes it harder to vote by increasing the costs associated with voting?
voter ID laws
Andrew Downs' rational choice theory is a popular idea among political scientists. It postulates that
voters and politicians will generally act in their own self-interest
When do blacks participate in politics more than whites?
when their levels of education are equal to those of whites
Research suggests that the overriding bias in the news is one toward stories that
will draw the largest audience
European democracies have more parties in positions of political power than does the United States because of their
winner-take-all systems
Why do winning candidates claim a mandate even though political scientists generally discredit the mandate theory of elections?
winning candidates want to justify their policy proposals by claiming that the public supports them.