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AP Gov. Vocab Part 2

 
 

 
 
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Word Definition
reapportionmentthe redistribution of legislative seats
Generational effectEffect that events have on political opinions, thoughts, and preferences of people affect a generation
Peer GroupMembers share common relevant social characteristics ; They play important parts in socialization process helping to shape attitudes and beliefs
Political SpectrumThe range of political ideas and beliefs
CommunismWorkers collectively owning the land
SocialistsMixed government with private ownership of factors of production
ReactionaryA person who favors a return to earlier more conservative system
FascismLikes dictators
Political ideologyCollectively held ideas and beliefs concerning the nature of the ideal political system, economic order, social goals, and moral values
Public opinionWhat most people think and feel about a subject
Public Opinion pollsPolls to test how the public felt on a topic
Random Sample pollsNames are drawn at random to be polled
Tracking pollsFollow candidates on particular issues or how they vote
Exit pollsConducted after vote; People stand outside to ask how people voted
Latent public opinionPolitical opinions that citizens hold but don’t express or act on
IntensityThe strength one feels for or against an issue or political policy
FluidityChanging of public opinion as time passes
Australian BallotBallot is printed with all names and proposals and put into an envelope. The envelope is given to the person who votes in secret behind a curtain. They put it back in the envelope and it is put into a machine to be read
LinkageLinkage institutions are institutions that link people to the government
Political PartyA group of people who hold similar political beliefs and goals and organize to win political elections, set policy and to generally take over the machinery of government
Party OrganizationHow a political party is structured and its leadership
Party in GovernmentAll elected and appointed officials with party identification
Party in ElectorateCitizens with political identification and has clear preference of one party over another
Independentdoesn’t associate with a political party
Caucusmeeting of party followers at which delegates are picked
Critical electionsElection that could establish dominance of a political party for several years
1800 presidential electionDemocratic Republicans organized at state and local levels; Federalists didn’t and died out; Democratic Republicans dominated next 20 years
1824 presidential electionDemocratic Republicans only political party but they had four candidates; No one had a majority so the House had to pick; They chose John Quincy Adams even though Andrew Jackson had more of the popular vote
2 Party SystemPolitical system where only two parties have a realistic chance of winning
Duverger’s LawIn our system, majority winner earns the seat; If you’re second, you get nothing!; This discourages minority parties
Single Member districtElectoral district (US) from which a single member is chosen; One person wins, second place gets nothing
Proportional representationA system where the degree of representation is decided by the amount that needs to be represented
Single Issue Partyfocuses on one issue
Spin off Partyparty created when there’s a faction in the bigger party
Splinter Partycomposed of people broken away from another party
Economic Protest Partiesprotest economic issues
National ConventionsA meeting where a political party approves the platform and finds a presidential candidate
National CommitteeThe committee at the head of a national level party - has nothing to do with local/ state parties; do all the work for national candidates
Spoilagerewarding favorite people with government positions once in office
Congressional Campaign CommitteeThe committee that works to get congressmen reelected
PatronageTangible incentives such as money, political jobs or an opportunity to get favors from government
SuperdelegatesParty leaders and elected officials who become delegates to the national convention without having to run in primaries or caucuses
Ideological PartyA party that holds principle above all else
Solidary GroupsMost common form of party organization; Members motivated by solidary incentives
Sponsored PartiesCreated or sustained by another organization
Personal Followinga group that follows a specific person; people with them include Kennedys, Curley, Talmadges, Longs
PlatformAn important statement of principles held by the party/ candidate
Primarypreliminary election where voters narrow the field of candidates
Blanket primaryprimary system in which each voter receives a single ballot and they list the parties candidate for each nomination (you see both the Dem. and Rep. candidates) and you can do crossover voting
Closed primaryA primary limited to registered political party members only; you can only vote for the candidates in your party
Open primaryPrimary where voters can just go and vote ; Voters do not have to state party affiliation but are not allowed to split the ticket
Presidential primaryprimary for deciding presidential candidates
General Electionan actual presidential election
Robert M. La FolletteWisconsin 1902 - authored our countries first state law about primaries
Crossover votingvoting for some candidates from one party and some candidates from another
Splitting the ticketvoting for some candidates from one party and some candidates from another
Focus groupssmall group of people led by a moderator; Tell you what the public wants you to talk about
Moderatorleads discussion about how people feel on specific issues or candidates.
Front loadingpractice of scheduling presidential primaries early in campaign
Iowa Caucus1st Caucus of presidential campaign
New Hampshire PrimaryNew Hampshire goes 1st in the primaries; Generally their winner will win in total
Super TuesdayLarge number of presidential caucuses - mostly all in Southern states, but this year we are here.
Preference pollsPolls where the names of presidential candidates are separated from names of party convention delegates - Most people don't know about the link
Mandatory Preference Pollslink delegates to the candidate name and are pledged to vote for that candidate
Electoral CollegeThe group of people who choose the president based on the people’s votes
ElectorA person in the electoral college
Winner-take-allWhoever gets the most votes wins; Second place gets nothing
Election DayThe day of election - In the U.S., it is the first Tuesday after the first Monday in November
Faithless ElectorsIf an elector didn’t vote for your political party, they were called a faithless elector
Federal Election CommitteeA committee created to enforce the FECA which puts restrictions on federal elections and the candidates (mostly monetary restrictions)
Political Action Committee (PAC)Committee designed to raise/spend money for the candidate or political party
527sorganizations that engage in political activity through soft money to back or refute a candidate; part of the tax code so under jurisdiction of IRS
In-Kind Contributionsdonations other than money - ex. services, materials, space, etc.
Independent ExpendituresFunds from outside group donated independently of a campaign to support a candidate; Candidate has nothing to do with it
Hard MoneyMoney raised and spent by individuals, PACs, or party committees for specific political candidates
Soft MoneyMoney raised and spent by organizations that aren’t coordinated directly with the candidate
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA) of 2002Banned federal candidates and party commissions from using soft money
Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (FECA)Considered grandfather of campaign finance law ; PACs can give up to $5000 to 5 federal candidates so long as it is freely given; They can spend unlimited money mobilizing and educating voters though
BundlingA PAC solicits donations from their members and has them write the checks to the candidate; People can each give up to $2000 – PAC can only give $5000; Candidate knows its from the PAC but *wink wink*
US v Newberry1921 - Said parties and primaries not in constitution so congress can’t regulate them
War Labor disputes Act of 1943Prohibits funding directly from labor unions; result: labor unions created first PAC
Federal Corrupt Practices act in 1925Expands requirements to try to stop; Parties quarterly disclosure every year but vague; No way to enforce
Hatch Act (Political Activities Act) of 1939A law limiting contributions to political parties; Made illegal to give if under federal contract
Buckly v ValeoSaid most limits on contributions are unconstitutional - Ok to set limit of $1,000 though (today $2000); Violation : limit on how much you can spend unless take from public fund
Wesberry v SandersMakes gerrymandering illegal
GerrymanderingWhen a state tries to redraw its districts so that a political party is favored
Political Interest GroupsA group that shares interest in goals, has organizational structure and has a desire to influence political policy; Differ from political party because membership base narrower and more focused on policy issues while political parties focus on elections
Disturbance TheoryCreated by David Truman in the 1950’s ; There are changes in the political environment which scare us so, we organize to protect our interests - This leads to a chain reaction of everybody organizing - this doesn’t explain the degrees of passion to join
Selective Benefits TheoryPrimary incentive for joining an interest group is our benefit; This only explains economic groups
Lobbyingart of persuading public officials to support your position
Revolving Door PoliticsFormer government official represents interests in private sector
Connected PACsPACs made of people with a formal affiliation with an established organization
Nonconnected PACsPeople share the same interests but are not connected through an organization
Private Interest GroupsGroups working for a small group of people; Public want to affect law while private want to affect people
Professional Interest GroupsType of private – they deal with a specific profession
Public Employee Interest GroupsInterest in government employees only
Single Issue GroupConcerned with one issue only
Direct technique or Direct LobbyingInteract directly with government officials; ex. Experts testify at public hearings, Provide supporting materials congressmen can use, Draft bills to give to congress people to present
Indirect techniques or Indirect LobbyingUse interest groups to influence government; Try to encourage grassroots - Make it look like people want something - Grassroots go further
Divided GovernmentWhen the part identification of the president is different from that of the majority of Congress.