Congressional reviewCongress's authority to review a new federal regulation enacted by a regulatory agency and overrule it through a joint resolution
Frozen!
Frozen!
Boost!
Boost!
Floor leadersdirect majority or minority party strategy and decisions in the House and Senate
Majority-minority districts
Incrementalism
The Right to Privacy extends to letting women make decisions about their bodies without government surveillance.
Vetothe president's power to reject a bill passed by Congress
one party controls the executive (president) and the other party controls one or both houses of Congress
Federalist Papers
Electoral College
OversightCongress monitors policies of the executive branch; the process by which the legislative branch checks the executive branch to ensure that the laws Congress has passed are being administered in keeping with legislators' intent
Constitution
West Virginia Board of Education v. Barnette
a political system in which power is divided between the national government and state government
Standing committeea permanent committee of Congress that deals with legislation and oversight in a broad policy area
Direct primaryparty members vote to nominate their candidate for the general election
Representative democracy
Commerce and slave trade compromise
Eminent domainallows the government to take private property for public use, as long as just compensation is paid
powers enumerated in the Constitution
Apportionmentdistribution of congressional representatives among the states, based on the population of each state
an agreement by every senator to the terms of debate on a given piece of legislation
Policy adoptionthe approval of a policy by legislation
Affirmative actiona program intended to give a boost of preference to minority applicants over white applicants in contracting, employment, housing, and college or professional school admissions
Political party
Political ideologya consistent set of beliefs about politics and public policy that sets the framework for evaluating government and public policy
test standard set by the Supreme Court in Lemon v. Kurtzman to measure the constitutionality of state laws. Separate, Secular, and Neutral in effect and intent
Deficitgovernment spending exceeds revenue
Prince v. Massachusetts
Unfunded mandatesmandates require states to enforce legislation without the funding necessary
Recess appointmenta presidential appointment made when Congress is not in session; doesn't require immediate confirmation
after listening to constituents, elected representatives vote based on their own opinions
Frozen!
Frozen!
executive privilegea claim by the president or a member of the executive branch that information or documents requested by Congress or the courts do not have to be turned over because of the separation of powers
a rule that says that four of the nine Supreme Court justices must agree in conference to hear a case
Initiativeallows voters to petition to propose legislation and then submit it for a vote by qualified voters; not available at the national level
On backgroundinformation provided in an interview that a reporter can quote but can't attribute specifically to the interviewee
voting for candidates from more than one party in the same election
Independent regulatory agencyan agency that is part of the executive branch and responsible for regulating and oversight of a segment of the economy; it is managed by a board or commission appointed by the president for a fixed term
Congressional reviewCongress's authority to review a new federal regulation enacted by a regulatory agency and overrule it through a joint resolution
Opinion leaders
the first ten amendments to the Constitution, ratified in 1791, which protect basic civil liberties
Political culturea set of basic values and beliefs about one's country or government that is shared by most citizens
Pluralist theory of democracyinterest groups compete in the political arena with each promoting its own policy preferences through organized efforts
conformity
Appellate courtscourts with authority to review cases heard by other courts to correct errors in the interpretation or application of law
sharp changes in the existing patterns of party loyalty due to changing social and economic conditions
the president can reject a portion of a bill while approving the rest; declared unconstitutional
Sixth amendment applies to federal criminal cases with possible imprisonment and too poor defendant. Gideon v. Wainwright
Establishes that clothing is symbolic speech, and is protected unless its censorship is in the public interest.
Referenduma general vote by the electorate on a single political question that has been referred to them for a direct
Off the record informationinformation provided in an interview that a reporter cannot directly use
Federal systema political system in which power is divided between the national government and state government
Connecticut (Great) Compromisesettled disputes between the states over the structure of the legislative branch; a solution to the problem of representation at the Constitutional Convention, in which the number of members that each state would have in the House of Representatives is determined by population, while each state would have equal representation in the Senate
Impoundmentrefusal of the president to spend money Congress has appropriated; was eliminated by the congressional Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974
Gatekeepers
the person currently holding office
Keynesian economicsthe belief that inflation occurs when too much money is chasing too few goods; the government must manage the economy by spending more money when in a recession and cutting spending when there is inflation
Discharge petitiona 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
Sound bitea very brief excerpt from a political speech aired on television or radio
Sixth amendment does not selectively incorporate to providing poor people in not-capital state cases a lawyer