AP GoPo Ch. 8
Elections and Campaigns Review
- How do American elections and those in parliamentary systems differ?
- How do presidential and congressional campaigns differ?
- List the strategic decisions that a presidential candidate must make and make sure that you understand each one. Then, list the key steps in running for president.
- What are the differences between running in the primaries and the general campaign? Give examples.
- Define closed, open, and blanket primaries.
- What does the term “coattails refer to?
- Explain the difference between a position and a valence issue. Then, give a couple of examples.
- What has been the effect of TV on campaigns? List as many effects as you can.
- What were the effects of the 1974 reforms?
- What does the book say are the three factors that determine peacetime presidential elections? Which group normally decides elections? How do the economy and character affect elections?
- What does the book say about the effect of money in presidential elections vs. congressional elections? Explain the connection between elections and incumbency.
- What are the three reasons that the book gives for why party identification doesn’t determine who wins elections?
- What are the differences between retrospective and prospective voting and what effect does such voting have on elections?
- How can campaigns make a difference in elections?
YOU WILL NEED TO KNOW THE FOLLOWING TERMS: Define if you think you need to.
Incumbent
Coattails
PAC or political action committee
Federal matching funds
Caucus (esp. Iowa caucus)
Primary (esp. New Hampshire)
Front-loaded campaign
Clothespin
Valence issue
Position issue
General election
Primary election
Open election
Closed primary
Open primary
Runoff primary
Smith v. Allwright (1944)
White primaries
Whistle-stop train tour
Campaign spots
Federal Election Commission (FEC)
Buckley v. Valeo (1976)
Soft money
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (2002)
527s
Prospective voting
Retrospective voting
Critical / realigning election
Split ticket voting
Straight ticket voting
“winner take all” primaries
Super Tuesday
Straw poll
Bush v. Gore (2000)
AP GoPo Ch. 9
Interest Groups Review
- List three reasons for the proliferation of interest groups in the U.S.
- Differentiate between interest groups in the U.S. and Britain.
- What two periods in U.S. history had the most rapid expansion?
- Identify four factors explaining the rise of interest groups and give an example of each.
- What are institutional interest groups and give an example of each.
- Name two types of associations Americans are more likely to join in the U.S. than in other countries.
- Why do Americans participate in civic associations more frequently than do citizens of other countries?
- What is the main reason most who are sympathetic to the goals of a mass-membership activity group do not join?
- Name some incentives to join an interest group and give two examples of each.
- What’s the difference between ideological interest groups and public interest groups?
- What are the major functions of local chapters of national membership organizations?
- Who shapes the policies of public-interest groups?
- Why do public interest groups make better progress when the administration is hostile?
- When did the union movement peak in the U.S.?
- Identify the major cause in the decline of union membership in the U.S.
- Which types of interest groups have the most difficult time raising money?
- What is a social movement? Give examples.
- In regards to the feminist movement, what are the three types? Give an example of each.
- Identify the sources of funding for interest groups.
- What type of person is most likely to join an interest group?
- Discuss some techniques used by interest groups, which are included in their direct-mail campaigns?
- How do interest groups supply credible information to lawmakers?
- What is the single most important tactic of the typical lobbyist?
- Who were the Dirty Dozen?
- What is the correlation between PAC money and buying votes in Congress?
- What are grassroots movements and how do they relate in interest groups?
- Do business interest groups spend more money on Republicans or Democrats?
- Why type of interest group raises more money?
- Explain the “revolving door theory”.
- List three activities specifically forbidden by the Ethics in Government Act of 1978.
- What amendment protects interest group activity?
- Discuss the provisions of the 1946 Federal Regulation of Lobbying Act. Was it a success?