Polling and Policy

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33 Terms

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wedge

(blank) issues are ones that deeply divide and leave little room for compromise with an opposing view.

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Keynesian

(blank) economics advocated increasing demand- even if it means increasing government spending. This was used by FDR in the New Deal and generally is accepted by Democrats today

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Reagan

He is one of the most popular Republican presidents. He was in office during the 1980s and was a strong opponent of the USSR (communists). He also advocated devolution

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Obamacare

AKA the Affordable Care ACt- it allows young people to stay on parents health care until they are 25, forbitds insurance companies from denying those with pre-existing conditions, and expanded Medicaid (and a bunch of other things)

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Third

Parties that are neither Republican nor Democrat- but they still run for office anyway

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Rural

Voters from (blank) areas tend to vote Republican. You may also find a farm here

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taxes

Republicans are vehemently opposed to raising these.

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Wording

the (blank) of questions affects the outcomes of answers in polls. Therefore, polls can be biased!

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Bradley

The (blank) effect describes the fact the African American candidates tend to poll better than their performance in elections.

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Polling

Candidates use (blank) to gauge interest in issues and then hone their message to appeal to more voters

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South

the region of the US that is most apt to vote for Republicans

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Focus Group

A type of poll in which a small group of people (less than 40) have conversations with a polling company to get deeper insight of public opinion

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Platform

A list of key statements about a political party’s beliefs

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Medicaid

Government sponsored health care for those under an established income level

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influence

Polling ends up as an (blank) for which policies politicians want to pursue.

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Democrat

Pro-choice, pro-union, environmentalist, more diverse and Joe Biden’s party

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Large

A poll with a (blank) sample size tends to be more accurate

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city

if you live in a big one of these, you tend to vote for democrats

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FDR

The initials of one of the most popular Democratic presidents. He was president during the Depression (New Deal) and WWII. He grew the Federal Govt. With social security

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plurality

The greatest number that is not a majority. In Bill Clinton’s first election against George Bush and third party candidate Ross Perot, Clinton won with a (blank) and not a majority of the popular vote

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Representatitve

to be accurate, a poll must be (blank) of the population (I.e. same percentage participate as represented in the whole population)

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Medicare

Government sponsored health care for senior citizens

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Exit

a poll in which voters are asked their preferences after they leave the voting booth

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monetary

(blank) policy deals with the Federal Reserve setting interest rates (the discount rate) to control for inflation and unemployment

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Coasts

The west and northeast (blanks) tend to vote Democratic

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Margin

a poll with a large (blank) or error is less reliable than one with a small margin of error

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random

To be accurate, polls must be (blank) - everyone has an equal chance of being polled

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Liberal

a tterm for a person that tends to vote for Democrats or the Green Party

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fiscal

(blank) policy - taxingt and spending by lawmakers. The other is monetary policy which is controlled by the Federal Reserve

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libertarian

This “third” party believes in the absolute smallest government possible. In other words - low or no taxes, no laws pertaining to morality, less services provided by the government, etc

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wasted

the major parties arogue that if you cote for a third party your vote will be (blanked)

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Approval

(blank) ratings ask whether or not voters approve or disapprove of the President

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Horse Race

When the media focus on who is ahead and behind instead of the issues. Polling is covered by the media as a (blank blank) covering who ois ahead and behind. Neigh