Government Ch. 8 Questions
What percentage of voters today cast a split ticket?
20 percent (less than)
Which of the following sum up the various functions of political consultants?
Advising on how to run a successful campaign. Gathering voter opinions. Production of promotional materials,
Which president was elected under his promise that he would do something about the Great Depression?
Franklin D. Roosevelt
Which of the following are true about political contributions called hard money?
Hard money is subject to legal limits. Hard money is money political parties give to candidates. Hard money is money given directly to a candidate. Hard money can be spent as the recipient chooses.
In a proportional representation system, which of the following is true? (most European democracies use this form of system)
Political parties win a number of seats in the legislature in rough proportion to the percentage of the vote each party receives.
Which type of third party arises from a belief that partisan politics is a corrupting influence that needs to be changed?
Reform parties
Opposition to slavery gave rise to which party?
Republican Party
Which party benefited from the 1896 realignment, which was triggered by an economic depression following a banking crisis under President Grover Cleveland?
Republican Party
Who oversees the day-to-day operations of the political party's national organization?
The national chair
When a realignment in the electorate occurs, which of the following occurs?
The parties reorganize themselves.
Which of the following are true of grassroots parties?
They are open to all citizens. They operate at the local levels.
Which of the following are distinct disadvantages of the rise of candidate-centered campaigns?
They provide opportunities for powerful interest groups to donate money to candidates. They make it easier for officeholders to deny responsibility for government actions.
Which of the following are roles that national political parties have?
To raise money for presidential campaigns. To seek media coverage of party positions and activities. To raise money for congressional campaigns
The main opposition to the Democratic Party in the 1830s and 1840s was the ______ Party, which eventually died out.
Whig
In general, political parties are made up of a ______ constituency of supporters.
broad
All party organizations have a responsibility to
build support among voters.
Today's political campaigns rely on which of the following to be successful?
campaign strategists media producers pollsters
Because of the increasing cost of political campaigns,
candidates must constantly work to raise funds.
Since the 1980s, which group has voted most strongly for the Republican Party?
fundamentalist Christians
In Britain's 2017 election, the Liberal Democrats received 7 percent of the national vote and, thereby, roughly 7 percent of the seats in Parliament. This is an example of a _____ system.
proportional representation
A permanent shift in party allegiances or electoral support is known as a party
realignment.
The national, state, and local organizations of the Republican and Democratic parties are
relatively independent; that is, each level does not have much control over the others.
Third parties formed to promote a stance on a particular issue are known as
single-issue parties.
The Republican Party has advocated for a
smaller government that performs fewer social welfare functions.
Which of the following led to the start of the political party realignment in the 1930s that worked to the benefit of the Democratic Party?
the Great Depression
America's plurality, or winner-take-all, system of electing candidates works to the disadvantage of
third parties.
Primaries in which candidates of both parties are on the same ballot and the top-two finishers compete in the general election are called ______ primaries.
top-two
The most electorally successful factional party in U.S. history was the
Bull Moose Party
Although party organizations still manage many tasks related to elections, the lead role in elections now lies with the
Candidate
Political parties and their ability to control politics in the United States have been weakened by ______-centered campaigns.
Candidate
Which two candidates for president lost in overwhelming landslides in part because they diverged too far from the middle of the ideological spectrum?
George McGovern Barry Goldwater
What usually happens after a third party is relatively successful in attracting votes during a U.S. national election?
One or both major parties will try to co-opt the issue or issues that made the third party successful.
A(n) ______ primary is one in which any registered voter, regardless of party affiliation, may vote.
Open
The strongest ideological party in U.S. history was the
Populist Party.
Which of the following contributed to the decline of the old system of party organizations?
Primary elections
Which are the major political parties in the United States?
Republican Party Democratic Party
When does a national party committee defer to the president to chose a national chair?
When the party controls the White House.
Which party formed during the 1830s was competitive against the Jacksonian Democratic Party?
Whig party
The most important minor parties in the 20th century have been ______ parties.
factional
Political parties began to emerge in the United States
in spite of many of the founding fathers' mistrust of them.
Which theory argues that a party can maximize its vote by placing itself at the location of the middle voter's preference?
median voter theory
The groups and interests that support a political party are collectively referred to as a
party coalition.
A reason political parties have emerged whenever democracy has been established is that
political parties provide individuals a way to join together in order to exercise their collective influence.
Voting for a candidate's past performance rather than future promises is an example of what is called ______ voting.
retrospective
During the 1930s the Democratic Party became the party of federal power rather than the ______ party.
states' rights
What is the term Darrell West uses to describes candidates' use of televised ads?
Air wars
Which two political parties were competitive during the first party system?
Federalists Democratic-Republicans
Which of the following voting blocs was largely notable for its migration to the Republican Party during the 1980s?
Sothern Whites
How many major political parties are there in the United States today?
Two
Countries with multiparty systems tend to have what kind of electoral system?
a proportional representation system
What group was most concerned about what Scammon and Wattenberg called the "social Issue"?
conservative Christians
State parties are involved with which of the following activities?
election of U.S. senators voter registration
Third parties that break off from one of the two dominant parties are known as
factional parties.
Although state parties do not work full time, they are ______ likely to have full-time employees than local parties.
more
Which of the following ranks the amount of media coverage of candidates from highest to lowest?
presidential candidates, Senate candidates, House candidates
On a ______, citizens vote for candidates from different parties.
split ticket
The in-party's chances of staying in power has historically depended primarily on
the condition of the economy.
Which of the following are part of the money chase of politics?
Raising funds. Pursuing wealthy patrons.
True or false: The Internet has overtaken television as the principal medium of election politics.
True (Television remains the principal medium, but some analysts believe the Internet will eventually overtake it)
What percentage of party activists work within local political party organizations?
95 percent
Which of the following statements about negative ads and negative campaigning are true?
Abraham Lincoln was the target of insulting comments about his appearance during election campaigns. Negative campaigning in presidential elections was used as long ago as when Thomas Jefferson ran for office.
The Civil War triggered a party realignment. What were the two major parties following this realignment period?
Democratic Party Republican Party
True or false: Local party organizations are stronger today than they were in the days of the political machines.
False (Local organizations were much stronger in the past)
Since 1968 the Republican Party has been weaker at the national level than it was in the decades after the Great Depression.
False (Recall that since 1968 Republicans have held the presidency more often than Democrats)
True or false: Today's candidates are more likely than before to owe their nomination to the efforts of their political party organization. True false question. True
False (Today's candidates are less likely to owe their political party's nomination to the party. Instead, candidates more often win the nomination themselves, by taking their campaign directly to primary voters.)
Even if a third-party candidate fails to win an election, the candidate has still done which of the following to help the third party succeed?
Drawn attention to an issue previously ignored by the two major candidates. Encouraged the major parties to address issues introduced by the third party.
The fact that more white women than white men vote for the Democratic Party is an example of a(n) ________ gap.
Gender
As compared to on television, ______ have greater control over the message on the Internet.
Individual users
Voting for a candidate's promises rather than his or her past actions is an example of what is called ______ voting.
Prospective
Which of the following characteristics of political campaigns have undergone change?
length of the campaign amount of money required focus of the campaign
The largest expenditure in presidential campaigns is for which of the following?
media
Today, political candidates tend to
set up and run their own campaign organizations.
The rise of candidate-centered campaigns has
Increased the importance of money in political campaigns. Made it easier for political newcomers to win high office
What purpose does party competition serve in American politics?
It narrows down options for voters. It allows groups of voters to act in unison.
The rise of candidate-centered campaigns has
Made it easier for political newcomers to win high office. Increased the importance of money in political campaigns.
To date, the Internet has proven itself to be better than television as a medium for
Mobilizing supporters. Fundraising.
The party realignment that began in the 1960s was completed during what presidency?
Ronald Reagan
Which of the following statements is true regarding a single-member district electoral system?
The candidate with more votes than any opponent wins the election in the district.
Current election laws in the United States favor
a two-party system. (most other Countries do a multiparty system)
In the era of Jacksonian democracy, the efforts of local party organizations, along with the extension of voting rights to citizens without property, contributed to an almost ______ increase in election turnout.
fourfold
On a variety of issues, white women hold opinions that are on average ______ than those of white men.
more liberal