AP United States Government - Unit 5 - Chapters 9-12

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60 Terms

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Political party

a group that seeks to elect candidates to public office

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Mugwumps (aka Progressives)

Republican party faction of the 1890s to the 1910s, comprising reformers who opposed patronage

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Critical or Realignment periods

a period when a major, lasting shifts occurs in the popular coalition supporting one or both parties

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Primary elections

an election held to determine the nominee from a particular party

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Closed primary

a primary election where only registered party members may vote for the party’s nominee

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Open primary

a primary election where all voters (regardless of party membership) may vote for the party’s nominee

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Super-delegate

party leaders and elected officials who become delegates to the national convention without having to run in primaries or caucuses

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Invisible primary

process by which candidates try to attract the support of key party leaders before an election begins

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National convention

a meeting of party delegates held every four years, which nominates the party’s candidate for president

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National committee

delegates who run party affairs between national conventions

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Congressional campaign committee

a party committee in Congress that provides funds to members and would-be members

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National chair

day-to-day party manager elected by the national committee

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Political machines

a party organization that recruits members by dispensing patronage

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Partisan identification

a voter’s long-term, stable attachment to one of the political parties

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Two-party system

an electoral system with two dominant parties that compete in national elections

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Plurality system

an electoral system in which the winner is the person who gets the most votes, even if they do not receive a majority; used in almost all American elections

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Caucus

a meeting of party followers in which party delegates are selected

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Momentum

when a candidate wins (especially an upset win), they tend to do better than expected in future contests (also known as the bandwagon effect)

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Battleground states

the most competitive states in the presidential election that either candidate could win (aka swing states)

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Retrospective voting

voting for a candidate because you like their past actions in office

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Prospective voting

voting for a candidate because you favor their ideas for handling issues

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Valence issues

an issue on which everyone agrees, but the question is whether the candidate embraces the same view

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Positional issue

issues in which rival candidates have opposing views and that also divide voters

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Incumbent

the person already holding an elective office

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Incumbency advantage

the tendency of incumbents to do better than otherwise similar challengers, especially in congressional elections

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Gerrymandering

drawing the boundaries of legislative districts in bizarre or unusual shapes to favor one party

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Surge and decline

tendency for the president’s party to do better in presidential years when they are at the top of the ticket (the surge), but to do worse when he is not because many voters are less enthusiastic and stay home (the decline)

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Coattails

the alleged tendency of candidates to win more voters in an election because of the presence at the top of the ticket of a better-known candidate, such as the president

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Political action committee (PACs)

committees set up by a corporation, labor union, or interest group that raise and spend campaign money from voluntary donations

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Independent expenditures

spending by political action committees, corporations, or labor unions to help a party or candidate but are independent from the party or candidate

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Soft money

funds obtained by political parties that are spent on party activities, such as get-out-the-vote drives, but not on behalf of a specific candidate

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527 organizations

organizations under section 527 of the Internal Revenue Code that raise and spend money to advance political causes

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Super PAC

a group that raises and spends unlimited amounts of money from corporations, unions, and individuals but cannot coordinate its activities with campaigns in any way

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501( c )4 group

a social welfare organization that can devote no more than 50% of its funds to politics. sometimes referred to as “dark money” groups because they do not have to disclose their donors

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Interest group

an organization of people sharing a common interest or goal that seeks to influence public policy

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Lobbyist

a person who tries to influence legislation on behalf of an interest group`

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Free rider problem

the tendency of individuals to avoid contributing to public goods

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Public good

something of value that all individuals share, whether or not they contribute to it (such as clean air or water)

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Incentive

something of value one cannot get without joining an organization

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Solidary incentives

the social rewards (sense of pleasure, status, or companionship) that lead people to join political organizations

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Material incentives

money or things valued in monetary terms

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Purposive incentive

a benefit that comes from serving a cause or principle

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Ideological interest groups

political organizations that attract members by appealing to their political convictions or principles

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Public-interest lobby

a political organization whose goals will principally benefit nonmembers

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Political cue

a signal telling a legislator what values are at stake in a vote, and how the issue fits into their own political views on party agenda

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Ratings

assessments of a representative’s voting record on issues important to an interest group

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Earmark

a provision in a law that provides a direct benefit to a client without the benefit having been reviewed on the merits by all of Congress

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Grassroots lobbying

using the general public (rather than lobbyists) to contact government officials about a public policy

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Sound bite

a radio or video clip of someone speaking

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Blog

a series, or log, of discussion items on a page of the World Wide Web

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Fake news

manufactured stories typically designed to support a particular point of view or candidate

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Trial balloon

information leaked to the media to test public reaction to a possible policy

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Selective exposure

consuming only those news stories with which one already agrees

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Agenda-setting (gatekeeping)

the ability of the news media, by printing stories about some topics and not others, to shape the public agenda

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Priming

the ability of the news media to influence the factors individuals use to evaluate political elites

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Framing

the way in which the news media, by focusing on some aspects of an issue, shapes how people view that issue

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Watchdog

the press’s role as an overseer of government officials to ensure they act in the public interest

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Game frame

the tendency of media to focus on political polls and strategy rather than on the issues

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Horse-race (scorekeeper) journalism

news coverage that focuses on who is ahead rather than on the issues

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Equal time rule

an FCC rule that if a broadcaster sells time to one candidate, it must sell equal time to other candidates