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Electorate
All eligible voters in a country.
Suffrage
The right to vote.
15th Amendment (1870)
Prohibits denying the right to vote based on race.
17th Amendment (1913)
Direct election of Senators → increased voter influence.
19th Amendment (1920)
Women's suffrage.
23rd Amendment (1961)
Gives DC residents electoral votes.
24th Amendment (1964)
Bans poll taxes in federal elections.
26th Amendment (1971)
Lowers voting age to 18.
Poll Taxes
Fee to vote; used to disenfranchise the poor & Black voters.
Poll Tests/Literacy Tests
Used to suppress minorities.
Civil Rights Acts (1957, 1964)
Federal enforcement of voting rights.
Voting Rights Act of 1965
Bans literacy tests; federal oversight of states with discrimination history.
Rational Choice Voting
Based on what benefits the voter most.
Retrospective Voting
Judging a candidate/party based on past performance.
Prospective Voting
Based on predictions of future policy.
Party-line Voting
Voting for one party's candidates across the ballot.
Party Loyalists
Stick with their party no matter what.
Candidate Character
Trustworthiness, personality, experience.
Political Issues
Stances on policies like immigration, economy, etc.
Voter Turnout
Who actually votes; affected by registration laws, age, education, etc.
Iron Triangle
Relationship between: Interest groups → Congress committees → Bureaucracy.
Pluralism
Idea that many groups compete → no single group dominates.
Amicus Curiae Briefs
"Friend of the court" briefs to influence Supreme Court decisions.
Incumbent
Current officeholder running again.
Primary Elections
Voters choose party nominee (private ballots).
Caucus
Party meetings; more public, less turnout.
Delegate
Represents voters at national convention.
General Election
Election Day - Tuesday after first Monday in November.
Electoral College
Winner-take-all system in most states.
National Popular Vote Interstate Compact
States agree to award electors to national popular vote winner once enough states join.
Hard Money
Direct donations to a candidate; regulated.
Soft Money
Party-building money, now mostly limited.
PAC
Gives money directly to candidates; contribution limits.
Super PAC
Can spend unlimited money independently; no direct donations to candidates.
Independent Expenditures
Spending not coordinated with a campaign.
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (2002)
Limited soft money; increased disclosure.
Mass Media
TV, internet, newspapers, radio.
Narrowcasting
Media targeting specific groups (FOX, MSNBC).
Infotainment
Entertainment + news (Daily Show).
Media Bias
Real or perceived slant.
Fake News
Misleading/false information.
Buckley v. Valeo (1976)
Limits on individual spending = unconstitutional (free speech).
Citizens United v. FEC (2010)
Corporations/unions can spend unlimited independent money.