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Chapter 14 and16 Review. AP GOVERNMENT INTEREST GROUPS and CAMPAIGNS. Response Grid. TEST. A B C D. One of the roles of interest groups is to make government aware of problems and offer a possible solution, which is known as what?. Representation Participation Education
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Chapter 14 and16 Review AP GOVERNMENT INTEREST GROUPS and CAMPAIGNS
Response Grid TEST • A • B • C • D
One of the roles of interest groups is to make government aware of problems and offer a possible solution, which is known as what? • Representation • Participation • Education • Agenda building • Program monitoring
Which of the following best describes gerrymandering? • The party in power wins four or five surrounding districts by very small margins • The Supreme Court requires that state legislators must adopt the doctrine of one vote, one person • The party in control of the state legislature draws district boundaries in such a way as to favor its own candidates in subsequent elections • By polling voters, party officials are able to determine how citizens will vote • The public decides which issues are most important and tells elected officials how to vote on specific bills
An interest group can attempt to lobby the judicial branch through filing • An amicus curiae brief • A writ of error Coram Nobis • A habeas corpus petition • A writ of certiorari e. A writ of mandamus
The theory that all interests are free to compete for influence in government, resulting in healthy democratic balance, is called • Elite power politics • Socialism • Pluralism • Rational choice • institutionalism
The Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (McCain-Feingold) did which of the following? • It created interest groups known as 527s • It made it illegal for unions to donate to presidential campaigns • It banned soft money donations to national parties • It banned candidates from running negative advertisements • It banned third-parties from federal funding
The process known as front-loading refers to • Presidential candidates raising funds far in advance of the first presidential primary • A presidential candidate seeking endorsements before officially declaring candidacy • The tendency of states to choose an early date on the primary calendar • Political Action Committees contributing money to candidates at least one year before the first presidential primary or caucus • The winner-take-all principle of the electoral college
The three points of an iron triangle include • An independent agency, a state, and a member of Congress • An administrative agency, an interest group, and a congressional committee • A cabinet department, an interest group, and the House majority leader • A regulatory commission, a corporation, and the White House Office • The Executive Office of the President, an interest group, and a Senate committee
The free rider problem occurs when • Interest groups seek public funding to advance their special interests • People benefit from an interest group’s efforts without making any contribution • Elected officials provide government services for those who have helped their campaign • Political campaigns manipulate the news media in order to obtain free media • Congressional candidates win elections because they belong to the party of a popular president
When contributing to congressional campaigns, political action committees are most likely to contribute to • Incumbents of both major parties • Third-party challengers • Republican challengers • State party organizations • National party organizations
What percentage of your current points would you like to wager on the next question? • 0% • 25% • 50% • 75% • 100%
Which of the following is true of Political Action Committees (PACs)? • They make campaign contributions in hope of gaining access to legislators • They are a part of political party organizations • They are allowed to contribute to only one candidate in any election • They nominate candidates for president at national party conventions • They operate at the state level but not at the national level
In response to the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (McCain-Feingold), the United States Supreme Court, in Citizens United v. FEC, ruled that • Limits cannot be placed upon candidates’ contributions to their own campaigns • Independent campaign expenditures by corporations and unions are protected by the First Amendment • Limits on issue advertisements 90 days before an election are unconstitutional • Limits on campaign contributions by minors are constitutional under the First Amendment • Requiring endorsement statements in campaign advertisements is unconstitutional
One of the best strategies that interest groups can use to achieve their goals is • Pressing for changes in high-profile public policies • Lobbying members of Congress to make small changes in existing policy • Using the judiciary to invalidate federal legislation • Encouraging states to use their Tenth Amendment rights and ignore federal law • Running candidates for office
Typically, presidential candidates implement their campaign strategies by • Applying their resources evenly among the states, because they must win popular votes in a majority of the states to be elected • Focusing on larger, competitive states because they might tip the balance of the electoral college • Focusing on small states, because these states have proportionally more electoral votes than more populous states • Ignoring the electoral college, because the popular vote determines the outcome of the election • Ignoring the electoral college, because more states are moving away from the winner-take-all process
What percentage of your current points would you like to wager on the next question? • 0% • 25% • 50% • 75% • 100%
Interest groups use Political Action Committees (PACs) to • Provide expertise to members of Congress to when they are writing legislation • Lobby the executive bureaucracy when they are considering new rules and regulation • Raise and spend money on election campaigns • Generate research that can be used to influence public opinion • Hire policy experts who will promote their views in the media
Interest groups are protected under the Constitution by the • Provisions of Article I Section 8 • First Amendment • Ninth Amendment • Tenth Amendment • Fourteenth Amendment
The head of a political campaign is usually called the • Campaign consultant • Political manager • Campaign manager • Political strategist • Political party leader
Political action committees representing which of the following groups have increased in number most substantially since the mid 1970s? • Labor • Business • Health-care professionals • Veterans’ groups • Civil rights advocates
In The Federalist No. 10, James Madison argued that factions in a republic are • A more serious threat if the republic is large • Natural but controllable by institutions • Not likely to occur if people are honest • Prevented by majority rule • Prevented by free elections
Lobbyists try to influence legislators mainly through • “wining and dining” legislators • Orchestrating petition drives and letter-writing campaigns • Placing persuasive advertisements in the media • Threatening to help the legislator’s opponent in the next election • Providing legislators with information on technical issues
If you got that question wrong, don’t feel bad • Question from the 2002 AP Test • Only 41% of all AP students in the United States got that question correct • Only 44% of the students receiving a 3 on the AP test answered that question correctly
Which of the following is true of amicus curiae briefs? • They are used by interest groups to lobby courts • They are used exclusively by liberal interest groups • They are used exclusively by conservative interest groups • They are now unconstitutional • They are the means by which a litigant seeks Supreme Court review of a lower court decision
Interest groups engage in all of the following EXCEPT • Testifying before congressional committees • Sponsoring issue advocacy ads • Lobbying federal agencies • Filing federal lawsuits • Using the franking privilege
What percentage of your current points would you like to wager on the next question? • 0% • 25% • 50% • 75% • 100%
Which of the following is NOT a way in which the federal government regulate campaigns? • By requirements for disclosure of campaign donations • By establishment of federal agencies to regulate campaign finance activities • By limits on the distribution of soft money • By limits on individual donations to campaigns • By prohibitions on negative advertising