chapter 12 Flashcards

1
Q

Closed primaries

A

a voter must declare in advance his or her party membership, and on election day votes in that party’s election. Most states have closed primaries

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2
Q

political efficacy

A

the belief that one can make a difference in politics by expressing an opinion and acting politically

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3
Q

plurality

A

Voting system in which the candidate who receives the most votes within a geographic area wins the election, regardless if they win the majority

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4
Q

Single-member districts

A

in any district the election determines one representative or official

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5
Q

fiscal policy

A

States and federal (typically refers to federal)
taxes and spending

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6
Q

monetary policy

A

federal
interest rates, banking regulations

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7
Q

open primaries

A

a voter can decide when he/she enters the voting booth which party’s primary to participate in. Only a few states have open primaries

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8
Q

blanket primaries

A

a voter marks a ballot that lists candidates for all parties, and can select the Republican for one office and a Democrat for another. Very few states have primaries of this type

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9
Q

cajun primary

A

All candidates, whether independent or partisan, are on the ballot and if no one wins a majority vote a runoff is held. Appeals to independents

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10
Q

caucus

A

A caucus is a meeting of supporters or members of a specific political party or movement.

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11
Q

winner takes all system

A

when a candidate who gets the most votes wins all of a state’s electoral votes.

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12
Q

faithless elector

A

one that casts a vote that doesn’t reflect the state’s popular vote

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13
Q

10th amendment

A

the Federal Government only has those powers delegated in the Constitution. If it isn’t listed, it belongs to the states or to the people.

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14
Q

benchmark poll

A

initial poll on a candidate and issues on which campaign strategy is based and against which later polls are compared.

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15
Q

frontloading

A

occurs when states move their primary elections to earlier calendar dates, in order to have more influence in the selection of candidates.

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16
Q

primaries

A

a preliminary election to appoint delegates to a party conference or to select the candidates for a principal, especially presidential, election.

17
Q

Super Delegates

A

current or former officials such as governors, former presidents, and members of Congress who attend the Democratic National Convention

18
Q

The Reform Act of 1974

A

governs the disclosure of political campaign contributions, spending by candidates and ballot measure committees.

19
Q

The 1976 Amendments

A

allowed corporations, labor unions, and special interest groups to set up political action committees (PACs) to raise money for candidates

20
Q

Buckley v. Valeo

A

the Supreme Court ruled that limiting the amount a candidate could spend on his/her own campaign was unconstitutional

21
Q

soft money

A

funds not specified for candidates’ campaigns, but given to political parties for “party building” activities

22
Q

Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002

A

banned soft money to national parties and placed curbs on the use of campaign ads by outside interest groups

23
Q

Honest Leadership and Open Government Act, 2007

A

increased restrictions on lobbying and bundling

24
Q

lobbying

A

organized attempt to influence legislators.

25
Q

Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, 2010

A

cannot limit how much individuals, corporations, and unions, spend on their own campaign,

26
Q

relationship between The bipartisan Campaign Reform Act and Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission

A

Citizens United overturned the Bipartisan Campaign Act

27
Q

Political Action Committees (PACs)

A

a private group responsible for raising and spending funds for use in election campaigns

28
Q

aggregate spending

A

the total amount of money donors can give to all candidates, committees and political parties during an election cycle

29
Q

who did the court side with in Buckley v. Valeo

A

Buckley: limits on candidate spending was a violation of free speech rights for candidates

30
Q

base limit spending

A

the amount given to an individual campaign or to a political party

31
Q

National Popular Vote Interstate Compact (NPVIC)

A

agreement among a group of states and the District of Columbia to cast all of their electoral votes for the presidential candidate that wins the national popular vote