Prospective votinga 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
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Issue networksthe numerous people who are involved in the formulation of policy, including the president, members of Congress, the cabinet, lobbyists, interest groups, government agencies, and scholars; a looser relationship than the iron triangles
common policy concernsan association of congressional members who advocate a political ideology, regional, ethnic, or economic interest
Rule of four
Separation of powerspractice by which power is divided among three branches of government; each branch has its own powers and duties and is independent of and equal to the other branches
a situation in which men and women hold different positions on a wide range of political issues
Federal questiona question of law based on interpretation of the US Constitution, federal laws, or treaties
a tax that is assessed on everyone at the same rate and, therefore, impacts the poor more than it impacted wealthy; sales tax is regressive
sharp changes in the existing patterns of party loyalty due to changing social and economic conditions
a party national convention at which the party's presidential nominee has already been determined through the primaries
a designation within a spending bill that provides for a specific expenditure
Commerce and slave trade compromiseresolved differences between northern and southern states at the constitutional convention; Congress could not tax exports nor ban the slave trade for twenty years
Midterm electionscongressional elections held between presidential elections
Rules committeedetermines the rules for debate for bills in the House
Agenda settingidentification of the problems and/or issues that require the attention of the government to resolve
government spending exceeds revenue
agreement with another head of state not requiring approval from the Senate
a consistent set of beliefs about politics and public policy that sets the framework for evaluating government and public policy
Popular Socereigntybasic principle of US government which holds that the people are the source of all governmental power
Checks and balancesa 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
Administrative Discretion
Unanimous consentan agreement by every senator to the terms of debate on a given piece of legislation
Political socializationcomplex process by which people get their sense of political identity, beliefs, and values
Pardon
Judicial activisma judicial philosophy that holds that courts have a more expansive role to play in shaping public policy
Veto
a program intended to give a boost of preference to minority applicants over white applicants in contracting, employment, housing, and college or professional school admissions
Upholds establishment clause and free exercise clause. Engel v. Vitale
States cannot ban private schools to prevent religious courses. Wisconsin v. Yoder
Miranda warning
Reapportionmentredistribution of the 435 congressional seats among the states after the census determines changes in population distribution
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Due process
Referendum
Court ruled that a DC law banning hand guns was unconstitutional. McDonald v. Chicago
Gridlockwhen opposing parties and interests often block each other's proposals, creating a political stalemate or inaction between the executive and legislative branches of government
New York Times Co. v. SullivanThe Supreme Court concluded that "actual malice" must be proved to support a finding of libel against a public figure. Principle of "breathing space"
Gender gapa situation in which men and women hold different positions on a wide range of political issues
Mandatesrequirements imposed by the national government on state and local governments to comply with federal
Critical elections
a law that makes an action a crime even though it was legal when it was committed or increases the penalty for a crime after it has been committed
the first court to hear and decide a case; US district courts and the US Supreme Court have original jurisdiction in cases involving foreign affairs, states or the national government
Procedural Due Processmethod of government action, or how the law is carried out according to established rules and procedures
Electoral Collegerepresentatives from each state who formally cast ballots for the president and vice president
Get-out-the-vote
a system whereby the people rule either directly or by elected representation
Hyperpluralist Theory of Democracyseen as a system of many groups pulling government in many directions at the same time, causing gridlock and ineffectiveness
Standing committeea permanent committee of Congress that deals with legislation and oversight in a broad policy area
Natural rightsbasic rights that are guaranteed to all persons; basic rights a government cannot deny
Precedent
Plurality voteelectoral process in which the candidate who receives more votes than any other candidate is elected
Slanderfalse verbal statements about others that harm their reputation
Closed rule
Sound bite
Supremacy clause
Griswold v. Connecticut (1965)Found a "right to privacy" in the Constitution that would ban any state law against selling contraceptives
Deficitgovernment spending exceeds revenue
the development of an approach to solving a problem that is on the political agenda
an individual who benefits from the activities of an interest group but does not support the group either financially or through active participation
Subsidya sum of money granted by the government or a public body to assist an industry or business so that the price of a commodity or service may remain low or competitive
Off the record informationinformation provided in an interview that a reporter cannot directly use