Runoff primarywhen no candidate receives a majority of votes, and election held between the two candidates who recorded the most votes in the primary
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Frozen!
Boost!
Boost!
Nonpartisan electionan election in which candidates run as independents without party affiliation
Lemon v. KurtzmanCreates the "Lemon Test", which has requires separate, secular, and neutral effect and intention in government action.
Iron triangle
Deficitgovernment spending exceeds revenue
a court order directing authorities to show cause for why a person under detention should not be released
Referendum
Executive orderaction by the president that does not require the approval of Congress; subject to judicial review
Federalisma division of governmental powers between the national government and the states
Dual Federalisma model of the relationship between the federal government and the states in which each is supreme in its own sphere; "layer cake federalism"
Marble vs. layer cake federalismMarble cake means 1930s fed expansion, layer cake means they are supreme in separate areas
Individualismthe belief that individuals should be left on their own by the government
Pardona convicted person is exempt from the penalties of a crime; only the president has this power at the national
Pluralist theory of democracy
Grassroots lobbyingorganizing a letter-writing campaign or taking out ads to influence public opinion and persuade public officials to support a particular policy
a consistent set of beliefs about politics and public policy that sets the framework for evaluating government and public policy
Betts v. Brady (1942)Sixth amendment does not selectively incorporate to providing poor people in not-capital state cases a lawyer
Hyde Amendment (1976)Passed by Congress in 1976; excludes abortion from the comprehensive health care services provided to low-income people by the federal government through Medicaid.
Judicial branchresponsible for interpreting and applying the laws; in the federal government it consists of the US district
Declaration of Independence
Eminent domain
Caucus (congressional)a group of members of Congress who may or may not be from the same party but who share
standards or guides based on prior decisions that serve as a rule for settling similar disputes
Due process
Federal systema political system in which power is divided between the national government and state government
At-largeall the voters of a state or county elect their representative
Legislative vetowhen Congress rejects an action of the president by a majority vote of both houses; declared
Majority opinionthe majority of justices agree on the decision and the reasons for the decision
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
Civil libertiesconstitutional freedoms guaranteed to all citizens. What the government can't do.
Elastic clausethe necessary and proper clause (Article I, Section 8, Clause 18) that allows Congress to pass laws to carry out its expressed powers
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Enumerated powerspowers that the Constitution specifically grants to the federal government
Logrollingthe exchange of political favors for support of a bill; an agreement between two or more members of Congress to vote for each other's bills
Good-faith exception
a primary election in which an individual does not have to be a registered voter in a particular party to vote for candidates of that party
Extraditionstates may return fugitives to a state from which they have fled to avoid criminal prosecution at the request of the state's governor
Betts v. Brady (1942)
a governing or controlling body whose power exists only within predefined limits that are established by a Constitution or other source of authority
election commission
Republica government that derives its authority from the people and in which citizens elect government officials to represent them in the processes by which laws are made; a representative democracy
Concurrent powersgovernmental powers shared by the federal and state governments
Miranda v. Arizona (1966)Before police interrogate, suspect must learn of rights like the Fifth Amendment
Discharge petition
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Frozen!
effect tendency of those already holding office to win reelection due to advantages because they already hold the office
redistribution of the 435 congressional seats among the states after the census determines changes in population distribution
Separation of powers
Off the record informationinformation provided in an interview that a reporter cannot directly use
Platforma statement of a political party on the issues facing the country, adopted at the national convention; each issue position is known as a plank
Federalist Papers
Advice and consentthe Senate's authority to approve or neglect the president's top appointments and negotiated treaties
a party national convention at which the party's presidential nominee has already been determined through the primaries
alliances that develop between bureaucratic agencies, interest groups, and congressional committees or subcommittees
Nonpartisan election
Open rulein the House, a rule that allows any amendments to a bill, regardless of whether they're relevant to the legislation
Judicial restraintholds that the Court should avoid taking the initiative on social and political questions, operating strictly within the limits of the Constitution
refers to the review, monitoring, and supervision of federal agencies, programs, activities, and policy implementation
Inherent powerspowers powers, usually claimed by the president, that are implied but not specifically stated in the Constitution or are derived from the office
offensive speech against racial or ethnic minorities, women, and homosexuals that creates a hostile environment
the process of reducing or completely eliminating federal government oversight of an industry so as to allow it to operate more freely; used to encourage competition and reduce costs to consumers
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