Chapter 12.APGov.JuanitaEspinoza Flashcards
Thomas Jefferson
Principle drafter of the declaration of independence; second vice president; third president of the united states from 1801 to 1890, cofounder of the democratic-republican party.
Donald J Trump
The 45th president, a republican elected in 2014; first president elected without prior political or military experience; an experienced businessman
Hillary Clinton
1st female major party candidate for president of the unites states, a democrat, who ran against Donald J Trump; secretary of state from 2009-2013; New York senator from 2001-2009; former first lady
Electorate
The citizens eligible to vote
Mandate
A command, indicated by an electorate’s votes for the elected officials to carry out a party platform or policy agenda
Primary Election
election in which voters decide which of the candidates within a party will represent the party in the genera election
Closed Primary
A primary election in which only a party’s registered voters are eligible to cast a ballot
Open Primary
A primary election in which party members, independents, and sometimes members of the other party allowed to participate
Crossover Voting
Participation in the primary election of a party with which the voter is not affiliated
Runoff Primary
A second primary election between the two candidates receiving the greatest number of votes in the first primary
General Election
Election in which voters decide which candidates will actually fill elective public offices
Initiative
An election whereby the state of legislature submits proposed legislation or state constitutional amendments by submitting them to the electorate for popular vote
Referendum
An election whereby the state legislature or state constitutional amendments to the voters for approval
Recall
An election in which voters can remove an incumbent from office to the next scheduled election
Electoral College
Representatives of each state who cast the final ballots that actually elect a president
elector
Member of the Electoral College
Reapportionment
The reallocation of the number of seats in the house of representatives after each decenail census
Incumbancy
Already holding an office
President coattails
When successful presidential candidates carry into office congressional candidates of the same party in the year of their election
Barack Obama
The first African American president of the united states, a democrat, who served das the 44th president from 2009-2017; senator from Illinois from 2005-2008; member of the Illinois senate from 1997-2004
Midterm Election
an election that takes place in the middle of a presidential term
Campaign Manager
The individual who travels with the candidate and coordinates the campaign
Finance Chair
the individual who coordinates the financial business of the campaign
Communications Director
The person who develops the overall media strategy for the candidate
Press Secretary
The individual charged with interacting and communicating with journalists on a daily basis
Campaign consultant
A private sector professional who sells to a candidate the technologies, services, and strategies required to get that candidate selected
Pollster
A campaign consultant who conducts the public opinion surveys
Voter Canvass
The process by which a campaign reaches individual voters, either by door0to-door solicitation or by telephone
Get-Out-To-Vote (GOTV)
A push at the end of a political campaign to encourage supporters to go to polls
Bernie Sanders
Longest serving independent in the US congress. Ran against Hillary Clinton in the 2016 democratic presidential primary; senator from Vermont since 2007; first elected to the house of representatives
Positive Ad
Advertising on behalf of a candidate’s qualifications, family, and issue positions, with no direct reference to the opponent
Negative Ad
Advertising on behalf of a candidate that attacks the opponents character or platform
Contrast Ad
Ad that compares the records and proposals of the candidates, with a bias towards the candidate sponsoring the ad
Inoculation Ad
Advertising that attempts the counteract an anticipated attack from the opposition before the attack is launched
Federal Election Campaign Act (FECA)
Passed in 1971, this is the primary law that regulates political campaign spending and fundraising. The law originally focused on increased disclosure of contributors for federal campaigns
Federal Election Commission (FEC)
An independent regulatory agency founded in 1975 by the US congress to regulate the campaign finance legislation in the US
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA)
Passed in 2002, the act amended the federal election campaign act of 1971 with several provisions designed to end the use of nonfederal, or “soft money” (money raised outside the limits and prohibitions of federal campaign finance law) for activity affecting federal elections
Citizens United v FEC
The 2010 US Supreme Court case that enabled corporations and unions have the same political speech rights as individuals under the first amendment. As part of this ruling, the supreme court found that the government may not prohibit corporations or unions from using their general treasury funds to support or denounce political candidates in elections
McCutcheon v FEC
the 2014 supreme court ruling that declared section 441of the federal election campaign act (FECA) unconstitutional. Section 441 imposed limits on any individuals total political contributions (to federal candidates, parties, or political action committees) in a two-year period
Political Action Committee (PAC)
Officially recognized fund-raising organizations that represent interest groups and are allowed by federal law to make contributions directly to candidates’ campaigns
527 political committee
organizations created with the primary purpose of influencing electoral outcomes; the term is typically applied only to freestanding interest groups that do not explicitly advocate for the election of a candidate
501 (c) Group
Interest groups whose primary purpose is not electoral politics
Super PAC
Political action committees established to make independant expenditures
Independant expenditures
Spending for campaign activity that is not coordinated with a candidates campaign
Public Funds
Donations from general tax revenues the campaigns of qualifying presidential candidates
Matching funds
Donations to presidential campaigns whereby every dollar raised from individuals in amounts less than $251 is matched by the federal treasury
Conventional Political Participation
Activism that attempts to influence the political process through commonly accepted forms of persuasion such as voting or letter writing
Unconventional political participation
Activism that attempts to influence the political process through unusual or extreme measures, such as protests, boycotts, and picketing
Turnout
The proportion of the voting-age public that casts a ballot
Retrospective judgement
A voters evaluation of a candidate based on past performance on a particular issue
prospective judgement
A voters evaluation of a candidate based on what they ledge to do about an issue if elected
Help America Vote Act (HAVA)
A federal law passed in 2002 that addresses issues of voting systems and voter access that were identified following the 2000 election. It established minimum election administration standards for states and units of local government with responsibility for the administration of federal elections and for other purposes related to the bill
Front Loading
The tendency of states to choose an early date on the nomination calendar