govt 2305 test 3 review
How many votes are needed to win the electoral college?
270
The Typical procedure for an initiative requires petitions how many signatures of the number of registered voters in a state?
5-10% of the total in the state
Of all the social and economic variables affecting political participation, What is the strongest single factor?
Education
What percent of the incumbents in the house of the representatives historically have won elections?
90-95%
majority of voters are ideologically more _______ than the voting records of congress would indicate?
moderate
what is the first objective of campaign advertising?
name recognition
Structuring the voter choice
reducing the number of candidates on the ballot to those who have a relative chance of winning.
What did a 2013 supreme court decision regarding the Voting Rights Act allow numerous states to do?
require id for voter registration
Proportion representation
the system by which legislative seats are awarded to a party in proportion to the vote that party wins in an election
majority representation
the system by which one office is contested by two or more candidates and is won by the single candidate who collects the most votes
Influencing Behavior
to modify or even reverse government policy to serve political interests (contributing money to candidates campaign).
Straight Ticket
voting for a single party's candidates for all of the offices
Split Ticket
voting for candidates from different parties for different offices
Direct Action
unconventional participation that involves assembling crowds to confront businesses and local governments to demand a hearing.
What are some characteristics frequently associated with nonvoters?
uneducated, low income
why has supreme court struck down most of the congressionally-mandated limits on campaign contribution?
violations of 1st amendment
Closed Primaries
voters must register their party affiliation to vote on that party's potential nominees
Caucuses
A closed meeting of the members of a political party to decide questions of policy and the selections of candidates for office.
National Convention
A gathering of delegates of a single political party from across the country to choose candidates for president and vice president and to adopt a party platform.
Progressivism
A philosophy of political reform based on the goodness and wisdom of individual citizens as opposed to special interests and political institutions.
Responsible party government
A set of principles formalizing the ideal role of parties in a majoritarian democracy
Political Participation
Actions of private citizens by which they seek to influence or support government and politics.
Supportive Behavior
Actions that expresses allegiance to country and government. (reciting the pledge).
By national law, ______ of the seats in the House of Representatives and _______ of the seats in the senate are filled in a general election held every even numbered year.
All, 1/3
Why do presidential elections seem to last so long
Campaigning
Beginning with the 2010 election, what supreme court case allows corporations to run ads directly advocating a candidates' election?
Citizens United Vs. Federal Elections Commission
Campaign finance laws are challenged as violations of the _______ amendment
First, freedom of speech
Solid South
For forty years, no Republican candidate won any of the states from the former confederacy. The south's solid south democracy record earned its nickname "Solid South".
citizen mobilization to stop construction of a nuclear waste facility near their homes would be an example of _________ phenomenon.
NIMBY not in my backyard. self interest principle.
Does the constitution discuss parties?
No
Functions served by political parties in today's political system
Nominating Candidates Structuring the voter choice Proposing Alternative Government Programs Coordinating the Actions of government Officials
To whom did the framers of the constitution leave the issues of voter enfranchisement to ?
States
Suffrage and Franchise both mean?
The right to vote.
Why does the New Hampshire presidential primary gather the lion's share of political and media attention
They go First. Frontloading first primary. New Hampshire's primary election led the nation in selecting delegates to the party's summer convention.
What was the critical event that helped end the Republican Party's domination of national politics in the 1920's
Wall Street crash of 1929 launched the great depression
the National Committee
a committee of a political party composed of party chairpersons and party officials from every state
federal elections commission (FEC)
a bipartisan federal agency of six members that oversees the financing of national campaigns
Electoral College
a body of electors chosen by voters to cast ballots for president and vice president
Class Action Suit
a legal action brought by a person or group on behalf of a number of people in similar circumstance.
Electoral Deallignment
a lessening of the importance of party loyalties in voting decisions
general election
a national election held by law in november of every even number year
direct primary
a preliminary election run by the state government in which the voters choose each party's candidates for the general election.
Initiative
a procedure in which voters can propose an issue to be decided by the legislatures or by the people in a referendum. It requires gathering a specified number of signatures and submitting a petition to a designated agency.
Standard socioeconomic model of participation
a relationship between socioeconomic status and conventional political involvement: People with higher status and more education are more likely to vote than those of lower status.
Conventional Participation
a relatively routine behavior that uses the established institutions of representative government, especially campaigning for candidates and voting in elections. ( voting and writing letters to public officials).
Unconventional Participation
a relatively uncommon behavior that challenges or defies the established institutions or the dominants culture. (Staging sit-down strikes in public buildings, chanting slogans outside public officials windows). (terrorism - extremely unconventional).
Presidential Primary
a special primary held to select delegates to attend a party's national nominating convention which in turn nominates the presidential candidate
Party identification
a voter's sense of psychological attachment to a party
referendum
an election on a policy issue
critical election
an election that produces a sharp change in the existing patterns of party loyalties among groups of voters
Congressional campaign committee
an organization maintained by a political party to raise funds to support its own candidates in congressional elections
Political party
an organization that sponsors candidates for political office under the organization's name.
What are the responsibilities of the Federal Election Commission (FEC)
enforcing limits on financial contributors to national campaigns, requiring full disclosure of campaign spending, and administering the public financing of presidential campaigns.
What percent of all Americans adopt their parents; party?
half of hall americans
26th amendment
lowered the voting age to 18
How many votes does each state have in the electoral college?
one for each senator, and one for each representative
Coordinating the Actions of governmental officals
political parties are the major means for bridging the separate powers to produce coordinated policies that can govern the country effectively.
Open Primaries
primary elections in which voters need not declare their party affiliation and can choose one party's primary ballot to take into the voting booth.
15th amendment
prohibited the states from denying the right to vote "on account of race, color, or previous conditions of servitude."
19th amendment
prohibits states from denying the right to vote "on account of sex"
what did the analysis of Super PAC ads during the 2012 Republican nomination show?
spending has increased
what are the states tightly contested known as?
swing states
elector reallignment
the change in voting patterns that occurs after a critical election
Why did black Americans shift significantly to the Democratic party in the 1960s
the democrats backing of the civil rights legislation
Proposing Alternative Government Programs
the general policies the candidate will pursue if they gain office.
recall
the process of removing an elected official from office
What does a practical test of whether or not a government is a democracy consist of
whether a country holds elections and if so what kind. -- No demonstrations