AP Gov Chapter 9 Vocab Flashcards
Nomination
the official endorsement of a candidate for office by a political party. Generally, success in the nomination game requires momentum, money, and media attention.
Campaign Strategy
The master game plan candidates lay out to guide their electoral campaign.
National party convention
The supreme power within each of the parties. the convention meets every four years to nominate the party’s presidential and vice-presidential candidates and to write the party’s platform.
Caucus
a meeting of all state part leaders for selecting delegates to the national party convention. caucuses are usually organized as a pyramid.
Presidential primaries
elections in which voters in a state vote for a candidate, (or delegates pledged to him or her). Most delegates to the national party conventions are chose this way.
McGovern-Fraser Commison
a commission formed at the 1968 Democratic convention in response to demands for reform by minority groups and others who sought better representation.
Superdelegates
National parry leaders who automatically get a delegate slot at the democratic national part convention.
frontloading
the recent tendency of states to hold primaries early in the calender in order to capitalize on media attention.
National primary
a proposal by critics of the caucuses and presidential primaries, which would replace these electoral methods with a nationwide primary held early in the election year.
Regional primaries
a proposal by critics of the caucuses and presidential primaries to replace these electoral methods with a series of primaries held in each geographic region.
Party Platform
A political party’s statement of its goals and policies for the next four years. The platform is drafted to the party convention by a committee whose members are chosen in rough proportion to each candidate’s strength. it is the best formal statement of a party’s beliefs.
Direct mail
A high-tech method of raising money for a political cause or candidate. It involves sending information and requests for money to people whose names appear on lists of those who have supported similar views or candidates in the past.
Federal election campaign act
A law passed in 1974 for reforming campaign finances. the act created the federal election commission, providing public financing for presidential primaries and general elections, limited presidential campaign spending, requiring disclosure, and attempted to limit contributions.
Federal election commission
a sex-member bipartisan agency created by the federal election campaign of 1974. the federal election commission administers and enforces campaign finance laws.
Presidential election campaign fund
Money from the $3 federal income tax check-off goes into this fund, which is then distributed to qualified candidates to subsidize their presidential campaign.