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Elections

Quiz yourself by thinking what should be in each of the black spaces below before clicking on it to display the answer.
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Incumbent  
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a candidate for political office who already holds the political office he or she is campaigning for  
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Primary Elections/Primaries  
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Preliminary, state by state, contests candidates must win in order to win the nomination of their party in the general election. Congress and the President participate in primaries to get elected.  
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Soft Money  
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Unlimited amounts of money used to back candidates without backing them by name. Corporations and unions were banned from using soft money by the 2002 Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act.  
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Split-Ticket Voting  
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voting for one party for one office and another for another  
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Political Action Committees (PACS)  
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organizations formed by corporations, unions, and trade associations with the purpose of raising funds (money)f or campaigns for political office. First allowed under the 1974 Federal Election Campaign Act  
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527 Groups  
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A tax exempt organization that promotes a political agenda, although they cannot expressly advocate for or against a specific candidate.  
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Federal Election Campaign Act of 1974  
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act of Congress that limited campaign contributions, but allowed loopholes such as PACs and soft money  
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McCain-Feingold Act/Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002  
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act in 2002 that further limited campaign contributions and banned soft money. Allowed the loophole of 527 organizations, organizations that cannot back a candidate directly but may spend money backing a certain political agenda, or cause.  
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Nomination  
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when a party chooses their candidate for the national election  
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General Election  
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when voters decide which candidate will hold/be elected to the national office  
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Closed Primary  
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voting is restricted to registered members of a political party. Democrats vote for Democrats and Republicans for Republicans  
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Open Primary  
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voters may vote in only one party’s , primary but may vote in whichever primary they choose  
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Blanket Primary  
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voters may vote for one candidate per office of either party (only Alaska and Washington use this system)  
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Delegate  
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a citizen of a state who goes to the national convention of a political party to help nominate a candidate based on votes received during the state’s primary  
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Plurality  
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greatest number of votes, but not more than half  
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Runoff Primary  
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if no candidate receives the required share of votes in a primary, a runoff primary is held  
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Super-Delegates  
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Democrats grant automoatic delegate status to many elected party leaders who generally vote for the front runner in the convention  
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Presidential Elections  
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elections in which the President is being determined  
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Midterm Elections  
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elections that occur in between Presidential Elections  
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Federal Matching Funds  
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Primary candidates who receive more than 10 percent of the vote in an election may apply for Federal Matching Funds, which essentially double all campaign contributions of $250 and under.  
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Super Tuesday  
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same day in March when many southern states hold their primaries, candidate can go a long way to winning nomination if he or she does well on this day  
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Front-Loading  
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states like New York and California have moved their primaries to earlier dates (more to the front) and have thus gained greater influence on the process  
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Federal Election Commission  
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government agency that monitors and enforces rules on campaign spending  
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Electoral College  
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institution created to keep the people of the USA from having too much influence on election of President by giving power to electors who cast electoral votes  
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Winner-take-all-System  
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winner of each states popular election takes all electoral votes in the electoral college  
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Mandate  
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idea that the public, by voting on one candidate or another overwhelmingly, can send a message about how they feel about the state of the nation  
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