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AP US Vocabulary

Apush Vocab

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88. The Twelfth Amendment (1804) provides for the reform of the method by which the Electoral College elects the president and vice-president. Under the Constitution, the electors were to cast their votes for both offices on a single ballot without specifying which of the two candidates on their ballot was preferred as president and which as vice-president. The candidate receiving the highest number of electoral votes would then become President, and the runner-up would become Vice-President. The unforeseen election in 1796 brought together of a president (Federalist candidate John Adams) and vice-president (Democratic Republican candidate Thomas Jefferson) from different parties. The election reflected another unforeseen result: a

American Pageant Chapter 12 Vocabulary

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The Seven Types of Government Participants

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1. Complete Activists: Participate in all forms of political activity from voting to campaigns 2. Inactives: Those who rarely vote and rarely involve themselves in politics at all 3. Activist: Those who will defend and support their political candidate, ideology, or belief 4. Voting Specialists: Those who only vote and don't participate in campaigns 5. Campaigners: Those who vote, get involved in campaigns, and have strong party loyalty and strong positions on issues 6. Communalists: Those who campaign but tend to focus on non-partisan issues 7. Parochial Participants: Those who don't vote or campaign but they will call their government officials about issues
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