Chapter 9 Connect ?s
Under federal law, PACs can contribute up to ________ per candidate for federal office in a primary election.
$5,000
PAC contributions account for about ________ percent of total contributions to congressional campaigns
25
About ________ percent of people who regularly listen to National Public Radio do not donate money to their local station
90
Members of the ________ generate more mail to Congress than any other group
AARP
Which of the following groups primarily uses litigation as its lobbying method?
ACLU
The limits of interest groups' influence might be gauged by the Democratic backlash against the ________, which tried to block the North American Free Trade Agreement in 1993.
AFL-CIO
A basic reason for the existence of so many interest groups in the United States is
All these answers are correct
Which of the following organizations is NOT an example of a single-issue group?
American Conservative Union
________ wrote that "Liberty is to faction what air is to fire."
James Madison
Economist Mancur Olson refers to what aspect of interest groups as "the size factor"?
Small groups are ordinarily more united on policy issues and often have more resources, enabling them to win out more often than large groups.
Which of the following statements would NOT be accepted by supporters of the pluralist view of interest groups?
The opinion of the majority should always prevail, in a policy dispute, over the opinion of a more intense and directly affected minority.
An interest group that focuses on policy benefits for senior citizens would be an example of
a single-issue group
The term iron triangle refers to
a small and informal but relatively stable set of bureaucrats, legislators, and lobbyists who are concerned with promoting a particular interest.
Which of the following is NOT a typical interest group function?
addressing a broad and diverse range of public issues
The Supreme Court decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010
allows corporations and labor unions to spend unlimited funds on campaigns
An informal grouping of officials, lobbyists, and policy specialists who come together temporarily around a policy problem is
an issue network
In the 1830s, the Frenchman Alexis de Tocqueville wrote that the "principle of ________" was nowhere more evident than in America
association
The influence of interest groups through the courts occurs through
both initiating lawsuits and lobbying for certain judges to be appointed to the bench
The largest number of PACs are those associated with
business
The most numerous economic groups are
business groups
Some groups pursue collective goods. A collective good is one that
cannot be selectively granted or denied to individuals; it must be shared.
The air we breathe is an example of a
collective good
Theodore Lowi's theory of interest-group liberalism
deals with the tendency of officials to support the policy demands of the interest group or groups that have a special stake in a policy
Outside lobbying does NOT include
developing and maintaining close contacts with policymakers.
The most fully organized interests are those that have which of the following as their primary purpose?
economic activity
James Madison argued
for regulation of interests through a governing system of checks and balances.
The situation in which individuals are tempted not to contribute to a cause because they will get the benefits even if they do not participate is called the
free-rider problem
Super PACs have been criticized primarily for
giving too much influence to the wealthy
PACs tend to contribute the most money to
incumbents
Most lobbyists receive support from elected officials in direct exchange for
information
An amicus brief
is a written document in which a group explains to a court its position on a legal dispute the court is handling
A main difference between iron triangles and issue networks is that
issue networks are generally less stable than iron triangles, in that the members of an issue network may change as the issue develops.
In the dynamics of an iron triangle, what benefit do interest groups provide to friendly government agencies?
lobbying support for agency programs
The Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010) ruling held that super PAC spending
must not be coordinated with election campaigns
Roughly how many American workers currently belong to unions?
one in eight
The theory that society's interests are most effectively represented through group action is
pluralist theory.
Grassroots lobbying is based on the assumption that officials will respond to
pressure from constituents.
Another name for an interest group is
pressure group
Effective inside lobbying is based upon
providing useful and persuasive information to key officials
"Agency capture" occurs when
regulatory agencies side with the industries they are supposed to regulate rather than with the public
James Madison's solution to the problem of factions (special interests) has, in the modern policy process, actually contributed to the problem by
resulting in a fragmentation of authority among policymakers, thereby providing groups more opportunities to get their way.
The second-largest number of PACs are those associated with
single-issue groups, such as environmental groups and right-to-life groups.
The Supreme Court ruling in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010) ultimately led to the creation of
super PACs.
In recent decades, lobbyists in Washington, D.C., have increasingly
targeted the executive branch in their efforts to influence policy decisions
Which citizens' group did a Fortune magazine survey rank as the nation's most powerful lobbying group?
the AARP
The dominant labor interest group is
the AFL-CIO
The citizens of ________ are MOST actively involved in interest groups and community causes
the United States
Why have issue networks become more prevalent?
the increasing complexity of policy problems
A flaw in pluralism theory is the fact that
the interest group system is unrepresentative, because some interests are far better organized and more powerful than others.
A purposive incentive is defined as
the opportunity to contribute to a worthy goal or purpose
Citizens' interest groups are distinguished from economic interest groups by the fact that
their members receive no direct economic benefit from attainment of the group's goals.
Political scientist Theodore Lowi has questioned pluralist theory by suggesting that
there is no concept of the public interest in a system that gives special interests the ability to determine the policies affecting them.
Economic groups have an advantage over noneconomic groups because
they have greater access to financial resources
In an effort to overcome the free-rider problem, noneconomic groups have
used Internet resources and computer-assisted mailing lists to target potential donors
In acknowledging the dilemma inherent in group activity, James Madison
worried that government would be overly dominated by groups, but recognized that a free society is obliged to permit the advocacy of self-interest.
Under federal law, PACs can contribute up to ________ per candidate for federal office for a primary election and general election combined.
$10,000
According to the Center for Responsive Politics, what was roughly the amount spent on lobbying in the United States in 2009?
$3.5 billion