US Politics Flashcards
in what two ways is the US president different from the UK prime minister
-they arent a member of congress
- the president is directly elected by the us people
what are the two stages of the presidential election
primaries- first election to decide on the candidate
election
what is the electoral college
a group of people would represent votes and meet in the white house to declare the president.
how many electoral college votes are there and how are they distributed
each state gets a share of the 538 electoral college votes depending on how big the population is
give an example of two states and how many electoral college votes they have.
California- 37,254,000 ppl and 55 votes.
wyoming- 564,000 ppl 3 votes.
how many electoral college votes do you need to win?
270
how big were obamas wins in 2008 and 2012.
2008- obama 365 to mcCains 173.
2012- obama 332to romneys 206.
what allowed trump to win in 2016
won a couple of NE states that were usually democrat.
Red states went so by small margins.
what happened to allow biden to win in 2020
Arizona, wisconsin, michigan, and georgia all changed.
why can electoral maps in the US be misleading.
Big cities, where people are more populated they vote blue. However, votes spread across large surface areas vote red.
what is a federal system?
a system where states have their own seperate powers and systems.
who are the executive in the US.
The white house
Who are the legislative in the US?
Congress
what is the role of the US president?
they have all executive power elected directly every 4 years. Two terms maximum.
How many and what do the house of representatives do?
435 members
they represent districts allocated to states based on population.
When are elections for the house of representatives.
every two years in november, done through first past the post.
What is the US cabinet like?
They are appointed advisors for the president, head of departments.
how many members are in the senate.
there are two for each state, 100 members.
when are elections for the senate.
every two years but in 6 year terms (one third each cycle)
who are the US judiciary and what can they do?
the supreme court is the highest court.
they can strike down laws and actions deemed unconstitutional.
what about US parties?
there are two parties, republicans and democrats.
Party loyalty is strong and bitter and is worse than before.
what do the senate do with legislation.
they can introduce, write, debate and vote on new laws. both houses must agree.
what can the president do to do with legislation.
they can put forward ideas they want to see in law.
what were the articles of confederation?
the first US constitution, created in 1781. it officially recognised the continental congress and gave it power to lead war, conduct diplomacy and manage territorial issues.