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Enlightenment
An 18th-century European intellectual movement emphasizing reason over tradition and supporting the idea that legitimate government must be justified and limited.
Natural rights
Rights people possess because they are human (not granted by government); government’s purpose is to protect these rights.
Social contract theory
The idea that people form governments to protect rights and provide order; government is legitimate only through the people’s agreement and can be changed if it violates the contract.
Consent of the governed
The principle that government authority is legitimate only when it comes from the people’s permission (through elections and broader participation).
Rule of law
The principle that leaders and citizens must follow established legal procedures; government power is exercised through law, not personal will.
Limited government
The idea that government has only the powers given to it and is restricted by law and procedure (not “no government”).
Thomas Hobbes
Enlightenment thinker (Leviathan) who argued people cannot govern themselves well and need a strong ruler for order; associated with social contract and rule of law as stabilizing forces.
John Locke
Enlightenment thinker (Second Treatise) who argued government exists to protect natural rights (life, liberty, property) and is legitimate only with consent.
Right to revolution
Locke’s idea that if government destroys or fails to protect natural rights, the people may overthrow or replace it.
Montesquieu
Enlightenment thinker (Spirit of the Laws) who argued political power should be divided into separate branches to prevent tyranny.
Separation of powers
A constitutional design that assigns distinct responsibilities to legislative, executive, and judicial branches so no single branch controls all power.
Checks and balances
A constitutional system of shared powers that allows each branch to limit the others (e.g., veto, confirmations), reducing the risk of tyranny.
Declaration of Independence
A 1776 founding document (primarily by Thomas Jefferson) declaring separation from Great Britain and justifying it using natural rights and consent of the governed, with grievances against King George III.
Articles of Confederation
America’s first national government (ratified 1781) designed to keep national power weak: no national executive, no national court system, and heavy dependence on states.
Shays’ Rebellion
A 1786–1787 uprising by Massachusetts farmers that highlighted the national government’s weakness under the Articles and increased support for a stronger central government.
Constitutional Convention (1787)
Meeting in Philadelphia originally called to revise the Articles but resulting in a new Constitution designed to create a stronger yet limited national government.
Virginia Plan
Convention proposal for a bicameral legislature with representation based on population, favoring large states.
New Jersey Plan
Convention proposal for a unicameral legislature with equal state voting (one vote per state), favored by small states.
Great (Connecticut) Compromise
Agreement creating a bicameral Congress: House based on population and Senate with equal representation (two per state).
Three-Fifths Compromise
Agreement counting enslaved people as three-fifths of a person for representation and taxation, affecting political power.
Bicameralism
A two-house legislature; in the U.S., the House is population-based and closer to the people, while the Senate provides equal state representation and greater stability.
Electoral College
The constitutional system for choosing the president using state electors equal to each state’s total members of Congress; 538 electors total and 270 needed to win.
Presidential veto
The president’s power to reject a bill passed by Congress; Congress can override with a two-thirds vote in both houses.
Federalists
Supporters of ratifying the Constitution who argued a stronger national government was needed and that internal structures would prevent tyranny.
Anti-Federalists
Opponents of ratifying the Constitution who feared national power would threaten liberties and states; demanded explicit protections of rights.
Federalist Papers
Essays by Hamilton, Madison, and Jay defending the Constitution and explaining its design; commonly used as evidence of Founding-era reasoning.
Federalist No. 10
Madison’s essay arguing factions are inevitable; the solution is controlling their effects, and a large republic makes it harder for any one faction to dominate.
Federalist No. 51
Madison’s essay arguing government must be designed so “ambition counteracts ambition”; separation of powers and checks and balances help prevent tyranny.
Brutus No. 1
Anti-Federalist essay warning a large national republic would be unresponsive and that federal powers (including necessary and proper) could expand beyond intended limits.
Federalist No. 70
Hamilton’s essay arguing for a single, energetic executive (one president) to ensure effective enforcement and accountability; critics feared concentrated power.
Federalist No. 78
Hamilton’s essay arguing the judiciary would be the least powerful branch but crucial as a check through judicial review; Anti-Federalists feared lifetime appointments and federal judicial dominance.
Bill of Rights
The first 10 amendments, written by James Madison, added soon after ratification to protect individual liberties and address Anti-Federalist concerns.
Popular sovereignty
The principle that government authority comes from the people (e.g., “We the People,” elections, and representative institutions).
Republicanism
The idea that people rule indirectly through elected representatives (representative democracy), rather than voting directly on every law.
Direct democracy
A system in which citizens vote directly on laws and policies (more common at state/local levels in the U.S.).
Representative democracy
A system where citizens elect officials to make policy decisions, with representation intended to refine and channel public views.
Participatory democracy
A model emphasizing broad, active participation by ordinary citizens across many social statuses to create more responsive government.
Pluralist democracy
A model viewing policy as competition and bargaining among many groups (interest groups, parties, organizations); does not guarantee equal group power.
Elite democracy
A model arguing political power tends to be held by wealthy/educated elites and that mass participation is often discouraged or limited.
Marbury v. Madison (1803)
Supreme Court case that established judicial review, strengthening the Court’s ability to strike down unconstitutional laws.
Necessary and Proper Clause (Elastic Clause)
Article I, Section 8 clause allowing Congress to pass laws needed to carry out enumerated powers; a main source of implied powers.
Supremacy Clause
Article VI principle that the Constitution and valid federal laws are the supreme law of the land, so states cannot override constitutional federal action.
Commerce Clause
Congress’s power to regulate interstate commerce; often interpreted broadly when activity crosses state lines or substantially affects interstate markets.
McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
Case holding Congress may create a national bank under implied powers and that states cannot tax valid federal institutions; reinforced national supremacy.
Gibbons v. Ogden (1824)
Case interpreting interstate commerce broadly and ruling that valid federal regulation overrides conflicting state policy.
United States v. Lopez (1995)
Case striking down a federal gun law as beyond the commerce clause in that context, showing judicially enforced limits on national power.
Categorical grants
Federal grants-in-aid with strict conditions and narrow purposes; often increase federal influence over state policy.
Block grants
Federal grants-in-aid for broad purposes with fewer restrictions; often associated with greater state flexibility (though funding still creates leverage).
Mandate
A federal requirement imposed on states; may be tied to funding conditions or require action regardless of funding.
Preemption
When a valid federal law overrides conflicting state law (typically justified through federal constitutional authority and enforced via the supremacy clause).
Separation of powers
Constitutional design that divides governing responsibilities among three branches: Congress legislates, the executive enforces/administers, and courts adjudicate/interpret in cases.
Checks and balances
System giving each branch tools to limit the others, forcing shared power, bargaining, and oversight (e.g., veto, confirmations, judicial review).
Enumerated powers
Powers explicitly listed in the Constitution (e.g., Congress’s power to tax/declare war; president’s veto).
Implied powers
Powers not written explicitly but inferred as necessary to carry out enumerated powers; often tied to the Necessary and Proper Clause.
Necessary and Proper Clause
Article I clause that provides the main constitutional basis for Congress’s implied powers to carry out its enumerated powers.
Inherent powers
Powers presidents claim because the U.S. is a sovereign nation; often invoked in national security/foreign policy and can be controversial.
McCulloch v. Maryland (1819)
Supreme Court case upholding Congress’s implied power to create a national bank and limiting a state’s ability to tax it, supporting broader federal power.
Appropriations (power of the purse)
Congress’s power to allocate funding to agencies/programs, creating major leverage over executive action and implementation.
Congressional oversight
Congress’s ongoing supervision of executive implementation using tools like hearings, investigations, subpoenas, reporting requirements, and budget control.
Signing statement
Presidential statement (often controversial) signaling how the executive intends to interpret or enforce a law.
Judicial review
Power of courts to declare laws or executive actions unconstitutional when deciding actual cases.
Bicameralism
A two-house legislature (House and Senate) requiring agreement between chambers, slowing lawmaking and encouraging broader consensus.
Apportionment
Distribution of House seats among the states based on population as determined by the census (every 10 years).
Redistricting
Process by which states redraw House district boundaries after apportionment to equalize population.
Gerrymandering
Drawing district lines to advantage a party (or sometimes groups), often by manipulating boundaries to shape electoral outcomes.
Packing
Gerrymandering strategy that concentrates a group into one district to reduce its influence in surrounding districts.
Cracking
Gerrymandering strategy that splits a group across many districts so it cannot form a majority in any one district.
Hijacking
Redistricting tactic in which lines are redrawn so two incumbents are placed in the same district and must run against each other.
Kidnapping
Redistricting tactic that moves an incumbent’s home address into a different district to weaken their reelection chances.
Baker v. Carr (1962)
Case allowing federal courts to hear malapportionment claims under the Equal Protection Clause, helping develop the “one person, one vote” principle.
One person, one vote
Principle that legislative districts should have roughly equal populations so each person’s vote carries similar weight.
Voting Rights Act of 1965
Law aimed at expanding minority political participation; later changes (notably 1982) encouraged creation of majority-minority districts.
Majority-minority district
Electoral district drawn so a racial/ethnic minority group makes up a majority of the voting-age population, increasing opportunity to elect preferred candidates.
Shaw v. Reno (1993)
Case holding that race-based districting that appears to separate voters primarily by race can violate equal protection unless justified by a compelling state interest.
Delegate model
Representation style where a member of Congress votes as a direct mirror of district preferences.
Trustee model
Representation style where a member of Congress uses personal judgment while considering constituent views.
Speaker of the House
Top House leader chosen by the majority party; influences floor debate, committee assignments, and the flow of legislation.
Whip
Party leader who counts votes, communicates party priorities, and persuades/pressures members to support the party agenda.
President pro tempore
Senate presiding officer when the vice president is absent; usually the most senior member of the majority party and largely honorary.
Standing committee
Permanent, specialized committee where much legislative work and oversight occur (e.g., Judiciary, Ways and Means).
Select committee
Temporary committee created for a specific purpose, often investigations (e.g., Watergate-related committees).
Joint committee
Committee with members from both chambers, often used for investigations or public communication.
Conference committee
Temporary bicameral committee that reconciles House and Senate versions of a bill into a compromise.
Markup session
Committee/subcommittee meeting where members debate, amend, and rewrite a bill before deciding whether to report it.
Pigeonholing
When a committee refuses to act on a bill, effectively killing it by keeping it from reaching the floor.
Discharge petition
House procedure that can force a bill out of committee for a floor vote despite committee inaction.
Filibuster
Senate tactic of extended debate (or threat of it) used to delay or block a vote, empowering the minority.
Cloture
Senate procedure to end extended debate; under current rules typically requires 60 votes.
Rider
Senate amendment that does not have to be relevant to the underlying bill and can be attached to legislation.
Pork-barrel spending
Spending provisions that direct benefits to a member’s home state/district (often included through riders).
Earmark
Provision directing funds to a specific project in authorization or appropriations bills (sometimes restricted by House rules).
Pocket veto
Veto that occurs when the president takes no action for 10 days (excluding Sundays) and Congress adjourns, preventing an override.
Line-item veto
Presidential power to veto parts of a bill rather than the whole bill; sought by presidents but limited by the Constitution.
Clinton v. City of New York (1998)
Case striking down the line-item veto as unconstitutional because it altered the Constitution’s lawmaking process.
Legislative veto
Congressional mechanism to nullify executive action by one- or two-chamber vote without passing a new law through bicameralism and presentment.
INS v. Chadha (1983)
Case ruling the legislative veto unconstitutional for violating bicameralism and presentment requirements.
Executive order
Presidential directive managing executive-branch operations; must rest on constitutional or statutory authority and can be challenged or reversed later.
Bully pulpit
President’s ability to use the visibility of the office to shape public debate and pressure Congress (informal power).
Executive privilege
Limited presidential power to withhold information to protect confidential communications or national security; not absolute.
United States v. Nixon (1974)
Case holding that executive privilege is limited; the president must comply with a judicial subpoena in a criminal investigation.