Delegatean elected official who considers it an obligation to vote the way the majority of his or her constituents wants
Frozen!
Frozen!
Boost!
Boost!
Voter turnoutthe total number of votes cast for the highest office on the ballot
Plurality vote
Incrementalism
the person currently holding office
Deregulation
segregation segregation that results from law
the development of an approach to solving a problem that is on the political agenda
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
Gatekeepersmedia executives, news editors, and prominent reporters who decide what news to present and how it will be presented
Whipa majority/minority party leader in Congress who makes sure the party members are present for important votes and vote by party
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
Fighting words
Judicial ReviewAuthority given the courts to review constitutionality of acts by the executive/state/legislature; est. in Marbury v. Madison
Cloturea method for cutting off a filibuster in the Senate; sixteen votes are needed to call for cloture and sixty are needed to end a filibuster
Religion does not override child labor laws. Wisconsin v. Yoder
Amendment
Hate speech
people who have no party affiliation
Upholds establishment clause and free exercise clause. Engel v. Vitale
Random sampling
Sixth amendment does not selectively incorporate to providing poor people in not-capital state cases a lawyer
the necessary and proper clause (Article I, Section 8, Clause 18) that allows Congress to pass laws to carry out its expressed powers
Midterm electionscongressional elections held between presidential elections
Opinion leadersthose individuals held in great respect because of their position, expertise, or personality, who may
Open rule
an addition or amendment added to a bill that often has no relation to the bill but that may not pass on its own
Markuprewrite of a bill after hearings have been held on it
Griswold v. Connecticut (1965)
allows voters to petition to propose legislation and then submit it for a vote by qualified voters; not available at the national level
Cloturea method for cutting off a filibuster in the Senate; sixteen votes are needed to call for cloture and sixty are needed to end a filibuster
Boost!
Boost!
a shift of voting patterns to form new coalitions of party support
Dealignmentwhen a significant number of voters choose to no longer support a particular political party
redistribution of the 435 congressional seats among the states after the census determines changes in population distribution
Impeachmentbringing charges of wrongdoing against a government official by the House of Representatives
Good-faith exceptiona rule of evidence that says that if the authorities act "in good faith," evidence that otherwise might have been excluded may be admissible. Modifies Mapp v. Ohio
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
a convicted person is exempt from the penalties of a crime; only the president has this power at the national
Frozen!
Frozen!
Legislative courts
Majority opinion
the difference in any year between government spending and government revenue
Frozen!
Frozen!
Federalist Paperswritten by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay to support ratification of the Construction
Pluralist theory of democracyinterest groups compete in the political arena with each promoting its own policy preferences through organized efforts
Senatorial courtesythe practice of allowing senators from the president's party who represent the state where a judicial district is located, to approve or disapprove potential nominees for the lower federal courts
economic policy in which the money supply is controlled through the Federal Reserve
Policy formulationthe development of an approach to solving a problem that is on the political agenda
De jure segregationsegregation segregation that results from law
Nonpartisan election
Gender gap
Party dealignmentweakening of ties between the voters and the two major parties
pork-barrel legislationlegislation giving benefits to constituents through sometimes unnecessary or unwise projects within a state or district, to enhance a member's chance of reelection
Lemon v. KurtzmanCreates the "Lemon Test", which has requires separate, secular, and neutral effect and intention in government action.
a law that makes a person guilty of a crime without a trial; neither Congress nor the states can enact such a law Constitutionally
Appellate jurisdictionjurisdiction the power a court has to review the decision of a lower court; the Supreme Court exercises appellate jurisdiction in the overwhelming majority of the cases it hears
Enumerated powerspowers that the Constitution specifically grants to the federal government
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
drawing district boundaries to give a minority group a majority
method of enacting a constitution or amendment into law
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
when the president takes no action on a bill within ten days of Congress adjourning, the bill does not become law