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AP Government - Chapter 9 Flashcards

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10953500187NominationThe official endorsement of a candidate for office by a political party. Generally, success is in the nomination game requires momentum, money and media attention0
10953500188Campaign StrategyThe master game plan candidates lay out to guide their electoral campaign.1
10953500189National Party ConventionThe 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.2
10953500190McGovern-Fraser CommissionA commission formed at the 1968 Democratic convention in response to demands for reform by minority groups and others who sought better representation.3
10953500191SuperdelegatesNational party leaders who automatically get a delegate slot at the national party convention.4
10953500192Invisible PrimaryThe period before any votes are cast when candidates compete to win early support from the elite of the party and to create a positive first impression of their leadership skills.5
10953500193CaucusA system for selecting convention delegates used in about a dozen states in which voters must attend an open meeting to express their presidential preference.6
10953500194Presidential PrimariesElections in which a state's voters go to the polls to express their preference for a party's nominee for president. Most delegates to the national party conventions are chosen this way.7
10953500195FrontloadingThe recent tendency of states to hold primaries early in the calendar in order to capitalize o media attention.8
10953500196Party PlatformA political party's statement of its goals and policies for the next four hears. The platform is drafted prior to the party convention by a committee whose members are chosen in rrough proportion to each candidate's strength. It is the best formal statement of a party's beliefs.9
10953500197Direct MailA method of raising money for a political cause or candidate, in which information and requests for money are sent to people whose names appear on lists of those who have supported similar views or candidates in the past.10
10953500198Campaign ContributionsDonations that are made directly to a candidate or a party and that must be reported. to the FEC. As of 2012, individuals were allowed to donate up to $2,500 per election to a candidate and up to $30,800 to a political party.11
10953500199Independent ExpendituresExpenses on behalf of a political message that are made by groups that are uncoordinated with any candidate's campaign.12
10953500200Federal Election Campaign ActA law passed in 1974 for reforming campaign finances. The act created the Federal election Commission and provided for limits on and disclosure of campaign contributions.13
10953500201Political Action CommitteesGroups that raise money from individuals and then distribute it in the form of contributions to candidates that the group supports. PACs must register with the FEC and report their donations and contributions to it.14
10953500202Federal Election CommissionA six member bipartisan agency created by the Federal election Campaign Act of 1974. The Federal Election Commission administers and enforces campaign finance laws.15
10953500203Soft MoneyPolitical contributions earmarked for party-building expenses at the grassroots level or for generic party advertising. For a time, such contributions were unlimited,until they were banned by the McCain-Feingold Act.16
10953500204527 GroupsIndependent political groups that are not subject to contribution restrictions because they do not directly seek the election of particular candidates. Section 527 of the tax code specifies that contributions to such groups must be reported to the IRS.17
10953500205Citizen United v. Federal election CommissionA 2010 landmark Supreme Court case that ruled that individuals, corporations, and unions could donate unlimited amounts of money to groups that make independent political expenditures.18
10953500206501 (c) GroupsGroups that are exempted from reporting their contributions and can receive unlimited contributions. Section 501c of the tax code specifies that such groups cannot spend more than half of their funds on political activities.19
10953500207Super PACsIndependent expenditure-only PACs are known as Super PACs because they may accept donations of any size and can endorse candidates. Their contributions and expenditures must be periodically reported to the FEC.20
10953500208Selective PerceptionThe phenomenon that people's beliefs often guide what they pay the most attention to and how they interpret events.21
10953500209SuffrageThe legal right to vote in the United States, gradually extended to virtually all citizens over the age of 18.22
10953500210Political EfficacyThe belief that one's political participations really matters - that one's vote can actually make a difference23
10953500211Civic Dutyhe belief that in order to support democratic government, a citizen should vote.24
10953500212Voter RegistrationA system adopted by the states that requires voters to register prior to voting. Some states require citizens to register as much as 30 days in advance, whereas other permit Election Day registration.25
10953500213Motor Voter ActA 1993 act that requires states to permit people to register to vote when they apply for a diver's license.26
10953500214Mandate theory of electionsThe idea that the winning candidate has a mandate from the people to carry out his or her platforms and politics. Politicians like the theory better than political scientists do.27
10953500215Policy Votingelectoral choices that are made on the basis of the voters' policy preferences and where the candidates stand on policy issues.28
10953500216Electoral CollegeA unique American institution created by the Constitution, providing for the selection of the president by electors chosen by the state parties. Although the electoral College vote usually reflects a popular majority, less populated states are over represented and the winner-take-all rule concentrates campaigns on close states.29
10953500217Battleground StatesThe key states that the presidential campaign focus on because they are most likely to decide the outcome of the electoral College vote.30

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