a political/economic system in which the government plays a major role (usually ownership) in determining the use of productive resources and the allocation of valuable goods and services; may be democratic or authoritarian
citizens choose officials who make decisions about public policy; a republic
under the 10th Amendment, powers not granted to the federal government or denied to the states reserved for the states or the people
Coattaileffect the ability of a strong or popular candidate to get other candidates on the ticket elected; it is a term most
Rule of four
Dissenting opinion
Johnson v. Zerbst (1938)
one party controls the executive (president) and the other party controls one or both houses of Congress
Conference committeea committee made up of members of the House and Senate that is responsible for reconciling the differences when two versions of the same bill pass both houses of Congress
information provided in an interview that a reported can use but cannot make even an indirect reference to the source
Recall
Political action committees (PAC$)extension of an interest group that contributes money to political campaigns
Anti-Federaliststhose opposed to the ratification of the Constitution because it gave too much power to the central government at the expense of the states and the lack of a bill of rights
a party national convention at which the party's presidential nominee has already been determined through the primaries
election party loyalty becomes less important to voters, and they vote for the other party candidate or
a two-house legislature
redistribution of the 435 congressional seats among the states after the census determines changes in population distribution
equality of opportunityeveryone should have the same chance; what individuals make of that chance depends their abilities and efforts
Nonpartisan electionan election in which candidates run as independents without party affiliation
a collection of shared attitudes of citizens about government, politics and the making of public policy
De jure segregationsegregation segregation that results from law
bringing charges of wrongdoing against a government official by the House of Representatives
Political socialization
conformityto social norms and values, tough on criminals
The Right to Privacy extends to letting women make decisions about their bodies without government surveillance.
a consistent set of beliefs by groups or individuals
Mapp v. Ohio (1961)
Policy adoptionthe approval of a policy by legislation
Grassroots lobbyingorganizing a letter-writing campaign or taking out ads to influence public opinion and persuade public officials to support a particular policy
Frozen!
Frozen!
Boost!
Boost!
voting for candidates all of the same party
Federal budgetamount of money the federal government expects to receive and authorizes government to spend for a fiscal year
service casework; assistance to constituents by congressional members
Elastic clausethe necessary and proper clause (Article I, Section 8, Clause 18) that allows Congress to pass laws to carry out its expressed powers
carrying out a policy through government agencies and courts
Exit poll
Executive order
Soft moneymoney used by national, state, or local party organizations that is not regulated by the Federal Election Commission
Loose Constructionistthe belief that judges should have freedom in interpreting the Constitution
Subsidy
At-largeall the voters of a state or county elect their representative
Pure speechverbal communication of ideas and opinions
Socialisma political/economic system in which the government plays a major role (usually ownership) in determining the use of productive resources and the allocation of valuable goods and services; may be democratic or authoritarian
under the 10th Amendment, powers not granted to the federal government or denied to the states reserved for the states or the people
Random samplinga statistical technique that gives everyone in the target group the same opportunity to participate in a poll
Policy evaluationdetermines is a policy is achieving its goals; usually carried out with congressional oversight
Regressive tax
a device by which any member of the House, after a committee has had a bill for thirty days, may petition to have it brought to the floor; requires 218 votes
authority given the courts to review the constitutionality of acts by the executive, states, or the
Concurrent jurisdictionjurisdiction the authority to hear cases is shared by federal and state courts
Exclusionary rulethat evidence acquired as a result of an illegal act by police cannot be used against the person from whom it was seized
Enumerated powerspowers that the Constitution specifically grants to the federal government
Majority-minority districts
Mass mediaall forms of communication that reach a large portion of the population
Three-fifths compromiseagreement at the constitutional convention that each slave counted as three-fifths of a person in determining representation in the House of Representatives and for taxation
Public opiniona collection of shared attitudes of citizens about government, politics and the making of public policy
Electorate
Pluralist theory of democracyinterest groups compete in the political arena with each promoting its own policy preferences through organized efforts