Representation & Participation Flashcards

1
Q

Like most parliamentary regimes, Germany “fuses” power, in that the executive branch derives directly from the legislative branch. True or False

A

True

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2
Q

During a German election, if a party’s candidate wins a seat in the Bundestag as an individual member, his or her party is allotted one less seat from the party’s slate elected via list voting. True or False

A

True

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3
Q

Germany’s electoral system of roughly half the seats in the Bundestag being allocated based on single-member districts advantages the small parties at the expense of the larger parties. True or False

A

False

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4
Q

The executive branch in Germany introduces most legislation and must initiate all federal budget and tax legislation. True or False

A

True

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5
Q

In the German system, committees will generally invite participation and testimony by supporters of proposed legislation; opponents are traditionally excluded from the process. True or False

A

False

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6
Q

If the Bundesrat rejects a bill by a two-thirds vote passed by the Bundestag, all the Bunderstag need achieve is an absolute majority to override. True or False

A

False

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7
Q

The party controlling the majority of state governments can have a significant effect on what legislation is passed in the German government system. True or False

A

True

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8
Q

The Bundesrat introduces a significant amount of legislation, but its administrative responsibilities are minimal. True or False

A

False

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9
Q

Although the CDU/CSU have supported the welfare state, they strongly opposed European integration since Adenauer. True or False

A

False

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10
Q

During the early years of the Weimar Republic, the SPD became the leading party with a working majority. True or False

A

False

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11
Q

Out of power from 1982 to 1998, the SPD largely failed to formulate attractive alternative policies, though it governed many states. True or False

A

True

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12
Q

Chancellor Merkel’s support for nuclear energy served her party well in 2011, believing that the future is cheap reliable energy. True or False

A

False

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13
Q

The PDS is concentrated in the 5 states of the former East Germany and has received over 20 percent of the vote in regional and local elections. True or False

A

True

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14
Q

The FRG is one of the few countries in western Europe that has not had a far-right and/or neo-fascist party gain seats in its national legislature. True or False

A

True

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15
Q

Germany voter turnout rates are less than 40 percent, reflecting the apathetic nature of the country’s electorate. True or False

A

False

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16
Q

Germany has an electoral system whereby about half of deputies are elected from direct constituencies and the other half are drawn from closed party lists referred to as: a) balanced legislative system, b) staggered electoral system, c) mixed member system, d) combo electoral structure.

A

c) mixed member system

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17
Q

In areas that directly affect the states, the Bundesrat can veto any bill passed by
the Bundestag: a) contested legislation, b) rejected proposal, c) consent veto, d) absolute veto.

A

d) absolute veto.

18
Q

In policy areas with no direct effect on the states, the Bundesrat has the prerogative to make the Bundestag pass a bill a second time: a) suspensive veto b) legislative veto, c) party veto, d) report veto.

A

a) suspensive veto

19
Q

The constitutional guarantee that political parties have a privileged place in German politics, including generous subsidies for building party organizations: a) party democracy, b) party unity, c) party stability, d) party political system.

A

a) party democracy

20
Q

Ostpolitik refers to: a) government subsidies provided to key industries, b) socialized health care system, c) a policy developed to promote contact and commerce with the Soviet Union and its communist allies, d) a commitment made never to develop weapons of mass destruction.

A

c) a policy developed to promote contact and commerce with the Soviet Union and its communist allies

21
Q

In Germany the lower house, the Bundestag, consists of how many seats? a) 515, b) 614, c) 713, d) 756

A

b) 614

22
Q

The European tradition in which parties are allotted seats in the legislature based on the percentage of popular votes they receive: a) proportional representation, b) unit rule, c) complimentary allocation, d) equitable distribution.

A

a) proportional representation

23
Q

How has Germany avoided the wild proliferation of parties that plagues some democracies, such as Italy and Israel, where coalitions are extremely difficult to form and sustain? a) by penalizing parties with financial citations that cannot muster a three percent vote, b) by requiring lists of candidates who were elected multiple times in previous elections, c) by requiring parties to pay an exorbitant public fee to become recognized, d) by requiring parties to receive at least 5 percent of the nationwide vote.

A

d) by requiring parties to receive at least 5 percent of the nationwide vote

24
Q

What is the primary purpose for debating a bill in the Bundestag that has come out of committee? a) to allow the opposition an opportunity to respond, b) to educate the public about the major issues of the bill, c) to provide interest groups an opportunity to voice their concerns, d) to rectify any problems by amending the bill.

A

b) to educate the public about the major issues of the bill

25
Q

How many members comprise the Bundesrat (upper chamber) representing the 16 Lander states? a) 57, b) 69, c) 72, d) 83.

A

b) 69

26
Q

The ability of the Bundesrat to slow down legislation when it votes against a bill passed by the Bundestag: a) suspensive veto, b) constructive veto, c) productive veto, d) beneficial veto.

A

a) suspensive veto

27
Q

Why has Germany often been called a party democracy? a) Because parties are so important to shaping state policy, b) Because the number of governing political parties have increased since the Weimar Republic, c) Because political parties have supplanted interest groups as the forces that influence politics, d) Because political parties are better able to interpret the German constitution.

A

a) Because parties are so important to shaping state policy

28
Q

The two far right political parties of Germany which emphasizes nationalism and aggression toward immigrants and ethnic minorities: a) Free Democratic Party and the Party of the State, b) the National Democratic Party and the German Peoples Union, c) the Union of Republican Socialists and the Democratic Vanguard, d) the State Christian Union and The Party National Unity.

A

b) the National Democratic Party and the German Peoples Union

29
Q

In 2005 a group of former left-wing Social Democrats who believed Schröder’s reforms undermined social democracy along with members of the East German Communist Party formed: a) the German People’s Union, b) the National Democratic Party, c) the Eco Party, d) die Linke.

A

d) die Linke

30
Q

The 2009 election enabled Chancellor Merkel to form her preferred coalition with the: a) SPD, b) die Linke, c) Greens, d) FDP

A

d) FDP

31
Q

The Social Democratic Party of Germany was founded in 1875 in response to: a) rapid industrialization, b) threats on the newly formed German state by the French, c) the growing unrest among the Junker movement, d) stabilize the right-wing forces that were on the verge of disbanding

A

a) rapid industrialization

32
Q

What percentage of the vote was the SPD able to obtain from 1949 to the early 1960s? a) 25%, b) 30%, c) 42%, d) 53%

A

b) 30%

33
Q

What happened to the SPD as a result of the 1959 party conference? a) It emphasized its primary reliance on Marxism, restructuring its party platform, b) It disassociated itself from the working class, c) It focused more on becoming a “catchall all” party attempting to broaden its support from labor to the middle class and Christians, d) It essentially became yet another conservative party, similar to other center-right parties in West Germany.

A

c) It focused more on becoming a “catchall all” party attempting to broaden its support from labor to the middle class and Christians

34
Q

The Greens are a) professional entrepreneurs, industrialists, and small land-owners, b) local artisans, small business owners, and rural farmers, c) intellectuals, public employees, private sector workers, and militarists, d) ecological activists, rural farmers, anti-nuclear activists, and small bands of Marxist-Leninists.

A

d) ecological activists, rural farmers, anti-nuclear activists, and small bands of Marxist-Leninists.

35
Q

What has been the Free Democratic Party’s (FDP) major influence since the establishment of the Federal Republic of Germany? a) it is a swing party that has allied itself with each of the 2 major parties at different times to form a majority coalition, b) it has achieved a plurality win at different times to form a working government majority, c) it has refused to ally itself either of the 2 major parties of Germany, serving more a spoiler role, d) it continues to die and then rise up after each major German election, eventually becoming the majority party in 2005.

A

a) it is a swing party that has allied itself with each of the 2 major parties at different times to form a majority coalition

36
Q

The Free Democratic Party embraces: a) the liberal tradition of a strong welfare state, b) economic liberalism in the European sense and social liberalism, c) centralized decision-making to assure efficiency of the state while focusing on the individual, d) a faith in an expansive government to assure social security and stability.

A

b) economic liberalism in the European sense and social liberalism

37
Q

What has helped make the Left Party (die Linke) have a growing base of support where it receives nearly 25 percent of the vote in the state of the old East Germany? a) its opposition to the NATO treaty, b) its opposition to cuts in social spending, c) its rejection of continued EU integration, d) its support for giving legal status to illegal migrant workers.

A

b) its opposition to cuts in social spending

38
Q

Representing a hybrid system, voters in Germany are asked to:

a) cast \_\_\_\_ votes on their ballot: the first for an individual candidate in a voter’s local 	\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ 
b) and the second for a list of national/regional candidates grouped by \_\_\_\_\_\_ affiliation.
A

a) two, district

b) party

39
Q

What are the drawbacks of a tradition of strong, unified parties in the Bundestag?

a) New members must serve long stints as \_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_. 
b) \_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ legislators have \_\_\_\_ opportunities to make an impact. 
c) Some of the most \_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ national politicians have preferred to serve their 	political apprenticeship in \_\_\_\_\_\_ or \_\_\_\_\_\_ government, where they have more 	visibility.
A

a) backbenchers
b) individual, few
c) prominent, state, local

40
Q

The Bundesrat exercises the following power:

a) it can exercise an absolute veto on \_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ to the constitution as well as all 	\_\_\_\_\_ 	that affect the fundamental interests of the \_\_\_\_\_\_\_, 
b) such as \_\_\_\_\_\_, territorial integrity, and basic administrative functions.
A

a) amendments, laws, states

b) taxes

41
Q

Until the 1980s, Germany had a “two-and-a-half” party system,

a) comprised of the moderate left \_\_\_\_\_\_\_ Democratic Party (SPD),
b) the moderate right 	\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_ Democratic grouping (CDU in most of the FRG, CSU 	in \_\_\_\_\_\_\_\_), 
c) and the small, centrist \_\_\_\_\_ Democratic Party (FDP).
A

a) Social
b) Christian, Bavaria
c) Free