Procedural due process Constitutional requirement that governments proceed by proper methods; limits how government may exercise power.
Boost!
Boost!
Libertarianism people who wish to maximize the personal liberty on both economic and social issues; prefer small,
a written document submitted to a court that presents the facts and legal reasoning of a party to the lawsuit
Liberal a person whose views favor more government involvement in business, social welfare, minority rights, and increased government spending
Hyperpluralist Theory of Democracy seen as a system of many groups pulling government in many directions at the same time, causing gridlock and ineffectiveness
Libel false written statements about others that harm their reputation
Joint committee a committee of Congress made up of members of both houses that focuses on issues of general concern but does not propose legislation
Get-out-the-vote
Legislative Branch
Moderate person whose views are between conservative and liberal and may include some of both ideologies
Policy implementation
party members vote to nominate their candidate for the general election
Frozen!
Frozen!
Politico a member of Congress who acts as a delegate on issues that constituents care about (such as immigration reform) and as a trustee on more complex or less salient issues (some foreign policy or regulatory matters)
Oversight
courts with authority to review cases heard by other courts to correct errors in the interpretation or application of law
New Jersey v. TLO (1985) Students have less privacy at schools; their stuff is subject to a search because of suspicion. This is necessary for discipline.
Veto the president's power to reject a bill passed by Congress
Delegate an elected official who considers it an obligation to vote the way the majority of his or her constituents wants
government corporation corporation a corporation that may receive part of its funding from Congress and is managed by a board appointed by the president; the function it performs could be carried out by private enterprise; an example is the US Postal service
a system in which each branch of the government has the power to limit the other branches of government so that one is not dominant; each branch of government is subject to restraints by the other two branches
Categorical grants federal funds given to state and local governments for specific programs that usually require the recipient to match the money provided and have other strings attached
issues that merit action, as determined by the public or those in power
amount of money the federal government expects to receive and authorizes government to spend for a fiscal year
Independent executive agency an agency that is part of the executive branch but not included in any executive department; the head of the agency (NASA, CIA for example) is appointed by the president and serves at the pleasure of the president
Prince v. Massachusetts Religion does not override child labor laws. Wisconsin v. Yoder
Realignment a shift of voting patterns to form new coalitions of party support
Impoundment refusal of the president to spend money Congress has appropriated; was eliminated by the congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974
Mapp v. Ohio (1961)
let the decision stand; court decisions are based on precedent from previous cases
when the president takes no action on a bill within ten days of Congress adjourning, the bill does not become law
Gerrymandering
Boost!
Boost!
election commission a commission delegated to supervise an election
North American Free Trade Agreement
Betts v. Brady (1942)
Grants-in-aid programs, money, and resources provided by the federal government to state and local governments to be used for specific projects and programs
Interest group
Political culture a set of basic values and beliefs about one's country or government that is shared by most citizens
Pardon
Bill of Rights the first ten amendments to the Constitution, ratified in 1791, which protect basic civil liberties
a method of evaluating candidates in which voters focus on candidates' positions on issues important to them and vote for the candidates who best represent their views
Realigning election when a minority party wins by building a new coalition of voters that continues over successive election
Party realignment
Frozen!
Frozen!
the president can reject a portion of a bill while approving the rest; declared unconstitutional
national laws supersedes all other laws passed by states
Extradition states may return fugitives to a state from which they have fled to avoid criminal prosecution at the request of the state's governor
Delegate
Griswold v. Connecticut (1965)
Superdelegates party officials in the Democratic Party who attend the national convention without having to run in primaries or caucuses
Delegated powers powers specifically granted to the national government in the Constitution
Caucus (congressional) a group of members of Congress who may or may not be from the same party but who share
Johnson v. Zerbst (1938) Sixth amendment applies to federal criminal cases with possible imprisonment and too poor defendant. Gideon v. Wainwright
De jure segregation
the warning that an individual must be read at the time of arrest and questioning, letting him know his 5th and 6th amendment rights
Deviating election minority party is able to win the support of majority party members, independents, and new voters
Enumerated powers powers that the Constitution specifically grants to the federal government
provided in an interview that a reported can quote and attribute to the source, referring to the source by name
President Pro Tempore serves as president of the Senate in the absence of the vice president; chosen by the majority
Direct democracy democracy citizens meet and make decisions about public policy issues; there are no elected officials; also called participatory democracy
a member of Congress who acts as a delegate on issues that constituents care about (such as immigration reform) and as a trustee on more complex or less salient issues (some foreign policy or regulatory matters)
offensive speech against racial or ethnic minorities, women, and homosexuals that creates a hostile environment
Incorrect!
Incorrect!
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Player 2 wins!
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