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120 Terms

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ballot fatigue

The result when a voter stops voting for offices and initiatives at the bottom of a long ballot

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Caucus

A form of candidate nomination that occurs in a town-hall style format rather than a day-long election; usually reserved for presidential elections

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Chronic minority

Voters who belong to political parties that tend not to be competitive in national elections because they are too small to become a majority or because of the electoral college system distribution and their state

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Closed primary

An election in which only voters registered with a party may vote for that party’s candidates

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Coattail effect

The result when a popular presidential candidate helps candidates from the same party when their own elections

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Delegates

Party members who are chosen to represent a particular candidate at the party’s state- or national-level nominating convention

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District system

The means by which electoral votes are divided between candidates based on who wins districts and/or the state

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Early voting

An accommodation that allows for voting up to two weeks before election day

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Electoral College

The constitutionally created group of individuals, chosen by the states, with the responsibility of formally selecting the next US president

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Incumbency advantage

The advantage held by officeholders that allows them to often win reelection

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Incumbent

The current holder of a political office

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Initiative

Law or constitutional amendment proposed and passed by the voters and subject to review by the state courts; also called a proposition

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Midterm elections

The congressional elections that occurred in the even numbered years between presidential election years, in the middle of the president’s term

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Open primary

An election in which any registered voter may vote in any party’s primary or caucus

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Platform

The set of issues important to the political party and the party delegates

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Political action committees (PACs)

Organizations created to raise money for political campaigns and spend money to influence policy and politics

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Recall

The removal of a politician or government official by the voters

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Referendum

A yes or no vote by citizens on a law or candidate proposed by the state government

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Residency requirement

The stipulation that citizen must live in a state for determined period of time before a citizen can register to vote as a resident of that state

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Shadow campaign

A campaign run by political action committees and other organizations without the coordination of the candidate

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Straight-ticket voting

The practice of voting only for candidates from the same party

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Super PACs

Officially known as Independent Expenditure-Only Committees; organizations that can fund raise and spend as a place to support or attack a candidate but not contribute directly to a candidate or with a candidates campaign

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Top-two primary

A primary election in which the two candidates with the most votes, regardless of party, become the nominees for the general election

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Voter fatigue

The results when voters grow tired of voting and stay home from the polls

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Voting-age population

The number of citizens over 18

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Voting-eligible population

The number of citizens eligible to vote

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Winner-takes-all system

All electoral votes for a state are given to the candidate who wins the most votes in that state

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National Voter Registration Act

Act that made it easier for citizens to register to vote

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Decrease election fraud

Why some places may make voter registration more difficult

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Voting age population

Population with lowest voter turnout

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over 45 years old

Group most likely to vote in elections

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Agenda setting

The media’s ability to choose, which issues or topics get attention

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Beat

The coverage area assigned to journalist for news or stories

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Citizen journalism

Video and print news posted to the Internet or social media by citizens rather than the news media

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Cultivation theory

The idea that media affect a citizens worldview through the information presented

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Digital paywall

The need for a paid subscription to access published online material

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Equal time rule

An FCC policy that all candidates running for office must be given the same radio and television airtime opportunities

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Fairness doctrine

A 1949 FCC policy, now to fund, that requires holders of broadcast licenses to cover controversial issues in a balanced manner

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Framing

The process of giving a new story, a specific context or background

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Freedom of Information Act

A federal statute that requires public agencies to provide certain types of information requested by citizens

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Hypodermic theory

The idea that information is placed in a citizen’s brain and accepted

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Indecency regulations

Lost that women indecent, and obscene material on public airwaves

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Libel

Printed information about a person or organization that is not true and harms the reputation of that person or organization

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Mass media

The collection of all media forms that communicate information to the general public

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Minimal effects theory

The idea that the media has little effect on citizens

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Muckracking

News coverage focusing on exposing corrupt business and government practices

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Party press era

Period during the 1780s in which newspaper content was biased by political partisanship

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Priming

The process of predisposing readers or viewers to think a particular way

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Prior restraint

A government action that stop someone from doing something before they are able to do it (for bidding someone to publish a book they plan to release)

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Public relations

biased communication intended to improve the image of people, companies, and organizations

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Reporter’s privilege

the right of a journalist to keep a source confidential

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Slander

spoken information about a person or organization that is not true and harmed the reputation of that person or organization

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Soft news

news presented in an entertaining style

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Sunshine laws

Laws that require government documents and proceedings to be made public

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Yellow journalism

Sensationalized coverage of scandals and human interest stories

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Evolution of Media

Print, Radio, Television, Internet

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Bipartisanship

The process of cooperation through compromise

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Critical election

An election that represents a sudden, clear, and long-term shift in voter allegiances

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Divided government

Condition in which one or more houses of the legislators controlled by the party and opposition to the executive

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First-past-the-post

A system in which the winner of an election is a candidate who wins the greatest number of votes cast, also known as plurality voting

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Gerrymandering

The manipulation of legislative districts in an attempt to favor a particular candidate

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Majoritarian voting

A type of election in which the winning candidate must receive at least 50% of the votes, even if a runoff election is required

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Majority party

The legislative party with over half the seats and a legislative body, and thus significant power to control the agenda

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Minority party

The legislative party with less than half the seats in a legislative body

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Moderate

An individual who falls in the middle of the ideological spectrum

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Party identifiers

Individuals who represent themselves in public as being part of a party

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Party organization

The formal structure of the political party in the active members responsible for coordinating party behavior and supporting party candidates

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Party platform

The collection of a parties position on issues it considers politically important

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Party polarization

The shift of party positions from moderate towards ideological extremes

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Party realignment

Shifting of party alliances within the electorate

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Party-in-government

Party identifiers who have been elected to office in a responsible for filling the party’s promises

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Party-in-the-electorate

Members of the voting public, who consider themselves part of a political party or who consistently prefer the candidates of one party over the other

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Personal politics

A political style that focuses on building direct relationships with voters rather than on promoting specific issues

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Plurality voting

The election ruled by which the candidate with the most vote wins, regardless of vote share

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Political machine

An organization that secures votes for a parties candidates or supports the party in other ways, usually in exchange for political favors such as a job in government

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Political parties

Organizations made up of groups of people with similar interests that tried to directly influence public policy through their members who seek and hold public office

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Precinct

The lowest level of party organization usually organized around neighborhood

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Proportional representation

A party based election rule in which the number of seats a party receives is a function of the share of votes. It receives an election.

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Reapportionment

The real allocation of house seats between states to account for population changes

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Redistricting

The redrawing of electoral maps

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Safe seat

A district drawn, some members of a party can be assured of winning by a comfortable margin

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Sorting

The process in which voters changed part allegiance is in response to shifts in party position

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Third parties

Political parties formed as an alternative to the republican and Democratic parties, also known as minor parties

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Two-party system

A system in which two major parties win all or almost all elections

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Why third parties fail

The electoral college prevents third parties from gaining substantial volumes of votes because people will not vote for them because they’re not likely to win

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Association

Groups of companies or institutions that organization around a common set of concerns often within a given industry or trade

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Astroturf movement

A political movement that resembles a grassroots movement, but is often supported or facilitated by wealthy interest and/or elites

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Citizens United

Citizens United V Federal election commission was a 2010 Supreme Court case that granted, corporations and unions the right to spend unlimited amounts of money on elections

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Collective good

A good such as public safety or clean air often produced by the government that is generally available to the population as a whole

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Contract lobbyist

Lobby is two works for a contract lobbying firm that represents clients before government

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Disturbance theory

The theory that an external event can lead to interest group mobilization

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Efficacy

The belief that you make a difference and that the government cares about you and your views

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Elite critique

The proposition that wealthy and elite interest advantage over those without resources

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Fragmentation

The result went a large interest group developed diverging needs

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free rider problem

The situation that occurs when some individuals receive benefits (get a free ride) without helping to bear the cost

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Grassroots movement

A political movement that often begins from the bottom up, inspired by average citizens concerned about a given issue

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In-house lobbyist

An employee or executive within an organization who works as a lobbyist on behalf of the organization

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Inside lobbying

The act of contacting and taking the organizations message directly to lawmakers in an attempt to influence policy

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Iron triangle

Three-way relationship among congressional committees, interest, groups, and the bureaucracy

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Issue networking

A group of interest groups and people who work together to support a particular issue or policy