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Test your basic knowledge |
AP Government
Start Test
Study First
Subjects
:
civics
,
ap
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Tax required to vote; prohibited for national elections by the Twenty-Fourth Amendment (1964) and ruled unconstitutional for all elections in Harper v. Virginia Board of Elections (1966).
Race
Implied powers
Pocket veto
Poll tax
2. The legislative leader selected by the minority party as spokesperson for the opposition.
Single-member district
Means-tested entitlements
Minority leader
Hard power
3. A procedure for terminating debate - especially filibusters - in the Senate.
Creative federalism
Issue advocacy
Closed primary
Cloture
4. A procedural rule in the House of Representatives that permits floor amendments within the overall time allocated to the bill.
Total and Partial Preemption
Rule-making process
Open rule
Treaty
5. Written defamation of another person. For public officials and public figures - the constitutional tests designed to restrict libel actions are especially rigid.
Libel
Executive agreement
Monopoly
Commerce clause
6. A tax whereby people with lower incomes pay a higher fraction of their income than people with higher incomes.
Department
Regressive tax
Medicaid
Grand jury
7. An official who is expected to vote independently based on his or her judgment of the circumstances; one interpretation of the role of the legislator.
Trustee
Constituents
Bureaucracy
Checks and balances
8. The total output of all economic activity in the nation - including goods and services.
Green party
Gross domestic product (GDP)
Bundling
Constitutionalism
9. Federal statute barring Federal employees from active participation in certain kinds of politics and protecting them from being fired on partisan grounds.
Connecticut Compromise
Hatch Act
Centralists
Movement
10. Economic theory based on the principles of John Maynard Keynes stating that government spending should increase during business slumps and be curbed during booms.
Keynesian economics
Due process
Discharge petition
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (BCRA)
11. A court order forbidding specific individuals or groups from performing certain acts (such as striking) that the court considers harmful to the rights and property of an employer or community.
Three-fifths compromise
Divided government
Labor injunction
Socialism
12. The powers expressly given to Congress in the Constitution.
Enumerated powers
Issue advocacy
Revolving door
Separation of powers
13. The tendency in elections to focus on the personal attributes of a candidate - such as his/her strengths - weaknesses - background - experience - and visibility.
Proportional representation
Natural rights
Candidate appeal
Connecticut Compromise
14. The drawing of election districts so as to ensure that members of a certain race are a minority in the district; ruled unconstitutional in Gomillion v. Lightfoot (1960).
New Jersey Plan
Immunity
Mass media
Racial gerrymandering
15. A theory of government that holds that open - multiple - and competing groups can check the asserted power by any one group.
Crossover voting
Hatch Act
Chief of staff
Pluralism
16. Censorship imposed before a speech is made or a newspaper is published; usually presumed to be unconstitutional.
Independent agency
Unemployment
Interest group
Prior restraint
17. Assigning police to neighborhoods where they walk the beat and work with churches and other community groups to reduce crime and improve relations with minorities.
Procedural due process
Community policing
Majority
Pluralism
18. The redrawing of congressional and other legislative district lines following the census - to accommodate population shifts and keep districts as equal as possible in population.
Cross-cutting cleavages
Collective bargaining
Recall
Redistricting
19. The proportion of the voting age public that votes - sometimes defined as the number of registered voters that vote.
Turnout
Impeachment
Collective action
Shays's Rebellion
20. Media that emphasize the news.
Environmental impact statement
Political party
Libel
News media
21. An ideology that cherishes individual liberty and insists on minimal government - promoting a free market economy - a noninterventionist foreign policy - and an absence of regulation in moral - economic - and social life.
Unitary system
Direct primary
Libertarianism
Bill of attainder
22. The widespread belief that the United States is a land of opportunity and that individual initiative and hard work can bring economic success.
Cross-cutting cleavages
American dream
Distributive policy
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
23. Interpretation of the First Amendment that holds that freedom of expression is so essential to democracy that governments should not punish persons for what they say - only for what they do.
Nongovernmental organization (NGO)
Party caucus
Random sample
Preferred position doctrine
24. The clause of the Constitution (Article I - Section 8 - Clause 3) that gives Congress the power to regulate all business activities that cross state lines or affect more than one state or other nations.
Reform party
Commerce clause
Checks and balances
Quid pro quo
25. Party leader who is the liaison between the leadership and the rank-and-file in the legislature.
Immunity
Substantive due process
Whip
Crossover voting
26. Agreement between a prosecutor and a defendant that the defendant will plead guilty to a lesser offense to avoid having to stand trial for more serious offense.
Plea bargain
Open primary
Recall
Issue network
27. How groups form and organize to pursue their goals or objectives - including how to get individuals and groups to participate and to cooperate. The term has many applications in the various social sciences such as political science - sociology - and
Nonprotected speech
Bipartisanship
Proportional representation
Collective action
28. Initial proposal at the Constitutional Convention made by the Virginia delegation for a strong central government with a bicameral legislature dominated by the big states.
Necessary and proper clause
Virginia Plan
amicus curiae brief
Rider
29. The distribution of individual preferences or evaluations of a given issue - candidate - or institution within a specific population.
Precedent
Monopoly
Public opinion
Independent expenditures
30. Retroactive criminal law that works to the disadvantage of a person.
Caucus
Trustee
Ex post facto law
Party caucus
31. A policy-making alliance that involves a very strong ties among a congressional committee - an interest group - and a Federal Department or agency.
Iron triangle
Fiscal policy
Centralists
Project grants
32. The residents of a congressional district or state.
Constituents
Competitive federalism
Closed rule
Amicus curiae brief
33. A formal written statement from a grand jury charging an individual with an offense; also called a true bill.
Open shop
Property rights
Indictment
Double jeopardy
34. A system of public employment in which selection and promotion depend on demonstrated performance rather than political patronage.
Merit system
Office of Personnel Management (OPM)
Bureaucracy
Judicial review
35. The head of the White House staff.
Marble cake federalism
Medicaid
Chief of staff
Honeymoon
36. State laws formerly pervasive throughout the South requiring public facilities and accommodations to be segregated by race; ruled unconstitutional.
Sedition
'Necessary and proper' clause
Offshoring
Jim Crow laws
37. A national meeting of delegates elected at primaries - caucuses - or state conventions who assemble once every four years to nominate candidates for president and vice president - ratify the party platform - elect officers - and adopt rules.
Civil disobedience
National party convention
Implementation
Libertarian party
38. Clause of the Constitution (Article 1 - Section 8 - Clause 3) setting forth the implied powers of Congress. It states that Congress - in addition to its express powers has the right to make all laws necessary and proper to carry out all powers the Co
Necessary and proper clause
Original jurisdiction
Extradition
Fighting words
39. An informal and subjective affiliation with a political party that most people acquire in childhood.
Primary election
Stare decisis
Party identification
Pluralism
40. Procedure whereby a certain number of voters may - by petition - propose a law or constitutional amendment and have it submitted to the voters.
Initiative
National Intelligence Director
Theocracy
Extradition
41. The right to vote.
Union shop
Divided government
Bicameralism
Suffrage
42. A jury of 12 to 23 persons who - in private - hear evidence presented by the government to determine whether persons shall be required to stand trial. If the jury believes there is sufficient evidence that a crime was committed - it issues an indictm
Grand jury
National party convention
Turnout
National supremacy
43. Unlimited amounts of money that political parties previously could raise for party-building purposes. Now largely illegal except for limited contributions to state and local parties for voter registration and get-out-the-vote efforts.
Soft money
Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
New Jersey Plan
Green party
44. Clause of the Constitution (Article I - Section 10) originally intended to prohibit state governments from modifying contracts made between individuals; for a while interpreted as prohibiting state governments from taking actions that adversely affec
Plea bargain
Whip
Contract clause
Dissenting opinion
45. Voting by member of one party for a candidate of another party.
Crossover voting
Senior Executive Service
Social capital
Separation of powers
46. The principle of a two-house legislature.
Fighting words
Bicameralism
Closed shop
Antitrust legislation
47. The Supreme Court has ruled that individuals - groups - and parties can spend unlimited amounts in campaigns for or against candidates as long as they operate independently from the candidates. When an individual - group - or party does so - they are
Independent expenditure
Caucus
Libertarianism
Antitrust legislation
48. Attempting to overthrow the government by force or use violence to interrupt its activities.
Sedition
'Our federalism'
Linkage institutions
Natural rights
49. Elections held in years when the president is on the ballot.
Hard money
Presidential election
Means-tested entitlements
Natural law
50. A system of government in which the legislature selects the prime minister or president.
Senatorial courtesy
Parliamentary system
Bureaucracy
Substantive due process