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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. A person who is employed by and acts for an organized interest group or corporation to try to influence policy decisions and positions in the executive and legislative branches.
Faction
Police powers
Precedent
Lobbyist
2. Tax levied on imports to help protect the nation's industries - labor - or farmers from foreign competition. It can also be used to raise additional revenue.
Tariff
Laissez-faire economics
Tax expenditure
Enumerated powers
3. The informal list of issues that Congress and the president consider most important for action.
Police powers
Cooperative federalism
Policy agenda
State of the Union Address
4. 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.
Weapons of mass destruction
Majority-minority district
Labor injunction
Issue advocacy
5. A theory of international relations that focuses on the tendency of nations to operate from self-interest.
Writ of certiorari
Gross domestic product (GDP)
Attentive public
Realism
6. Interest groups organized under section 527 of the Internal Revenue Code may advertise for or against candidates. If their source of funding is corporations or unions - they have some restrictions on broadcast advertising. 527 organizations were impo
Divided government
Health maintenance organization (HMO)
Party caucus
527 organizations
7. A type of policy that provides benefits to all Americans.
Distributive policy
De facto segregation
Congressional-executive agreement
Civil law
8. A policy promoting cutbacks in the amount of Federal regulation in specific areas of economic activity.
Issue network
Popular sovereignty
Deregulation
Devolution revolution
9. A theory that is based on creating enough military strength to convince other nations not to attack first.
Line item veto
Theory of deterrence
Inflation
Delegate
10. How voters feel about a candidate's background - personality - leadership ability - and other personal qualities.
Candidate appeal
Independent expenditures
Special or select committee
Medicaid
11. The power to keep executive communications confidential - especially if they relate to national security.
Progressive tax
Office of Personnel Management (OPM)
Executive privilege
Representative democracy
12. The effort to slow the growth of the federal government by returning many functions to the states.
Democratic consensus
Constitutionalism
Devolution revolution
Inherent powers
13. During the Great Society - the marble cake approach of intergovernmental relations.
527 organizations
Laissez-faire economics
Creative federalism
Whip
14. An elected office that is predictably won by one party or the other - so the success of that party's candidate is almost taken for granted.
Safe seat
Writ of habeas corpus
Capitalism
Constituents
15. A meeting of the members of a party in a legislative chamber to select party leaders and to develop party policy. Called a conference by the Republicans.
Majority rule
Party caucus
Proportional representation
Party identification
16. Power of a government to take private property for public use; the U.S. Constitution gives national and state governments this power and requires them to provide just compensation for property so taken.
Reinforcing cleavages
Ex post facto law
Due process clause
Eminent domain
17. An official who is expected to represent the views of his or her constituents even when personally holding different views; one interpretation of the role of legislator.
Ethnocentrism
Delegate
Restrictive covenant
Deficit
18. A tax whereby people with lower incomes pay a higher fraction of their income than people with higher incomes.
Implementation
Commerce clause
Regressive tax
Closed shop
19. Formal accusation against a president or other public official - the first step in removal from office.
Safe seat
Senior Executive Service
Impeachment
Party identification
20. A type of policy that takes benefits (usually through taxes) from one group of Americans and gives them to another (usually through spending).
Categorical-formula grants
Redistributive policy
Reform party
Party caucus
21. An informal and subjective affiliation with a political party that most people acquire in childhood.
Party identification
Socioeconomic status (SES)
Labor injunction
National Intelligence Director
22. 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.
National party convention
Public opinion
Party identification
Soft money
23. State laws formerly pervasive throughout the South requiring public facilities and accommodations to be segregated by race; ruled unconstitutional.
Jim Crow laws
Medicare
Express powers
Petit jury
24. 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.
Realigning election
Divided government
Health maintenance organization (HMO)
Plea bargain
25. Legislative or executive review of a particular government program or organization. Can be in response to a crisis of some kind or part of routine review.
Opinion of the Court
Oversight
Attentive public
Chief of staff
26. A PAC formed by an officeholder that collects contributions from individuals and other PACs and then makes contributions to other candidates and political parties.
Whip
Hatch Act
Trust
Leadership PAC
27. Federal laws (starting with the Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890) that try to prevent a monopoly from dominating an industry and restraining trade.
Political predisposition
Mass media
Ethnicity
Antitrust legislation
28. A belief that ultimate power resides in the people.
Popular sovereignty
Sales tax
Congressional-executive agreement
Social Security
29. 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).
Recall
Pluralism
Racial gerrymandering
Substantive due process
30. The process by which provisions of the bill of rights are brought within the scope of the Fourteenth Amendment and so applied to state and local governments.
Selective incorporation
Selective exposure
Revolving door
Concurring opinion
31. Implies that although federalism provides 'a sharing of power and authority between the national and state governments - the state's share rests upon the permission and permissiveness of the national government.'
Permissive federalism
Central clearance
Closed shop
Regulations
32. Widespread agreement on fundamental principles of democratic governance and the values that undergird them.
Demographics
Tax expenditure
Democratic consensus
Special or select committee
33. 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.
Realism
Redistricting
Due process clause
Honeymoon
34. The boost that candidates may get in an election because of the popularity of candidates above them on the ballot - especially the president.
Majority-minority district
Articles of Confederation
Value-added tax (VAT)
Coattail effect
35. Voting by member of one party for a candidate of another party.
Crossover voting
Single-member district
Issue advocacy
Distributive policy
36. The first governing document of the confederated states drafted in 1777 - ratified in 1781 - and replaced by the present Constitution in 1789.
Articles of Confederation
Eminent domain
Progressive tax
Bureaucrat
37. The tendency in elections to focus on the personal attributes of a candidate - such as his/her strengths - weaknesses - background - experience - and visibility.
Candidate appeal
Bureaucracy
Centralists
Restrictive covenant
38. The practice of exporting U.S. jobs to lower paid employees in other nations.
Interest group
Equal protection clause
Linkage institutions
Offshoring
39. The widely shared beliefs - values - and norms about how citizens relate to governments and to one another.
Seniority rule
Political culture
Ex post facto law
Suffrage
40. Economic theory based on the principles of John Maynard Keynes stating that government spending should increase during business slumps and be curbed during booms.
Joint committee
Devolution revolution
Conference committee
Keynesian economics
41. The clause in the Constitution (Article 1 - Section 8 - Clause 1) that gives Congress the power to regulate all business activities that cross state lines or affect more than one state or other nations.
Federalists
Plurality
Commerce clause
Popular sovereignty
42. Agency that administers civil service laws - rules - and regulations.
Joint committee
Monopoly
Office of Personnel Management (OPM)
Impeachment
43. Agreement between a prosecutor and a defendant that the defendant will plead guilty to a lesser offense to avoid having to stand trial for a more serious offense.
Recall
Cycle of decreasing influence
Plea bargain
Decentralists
44. Requirement that evidence unconstitutionally or illegally obtained be excluded from a criminal trial.
Random sample
Exclusionary rule
Antitrust legislation
Fiscal policy
45. A consistent pattern of beliefs about political values and the role of government.
Political ideology
Appellate jurisdiction
Plea bargain
Poll tax
46. Petition that - if signed by majority of the House of Representatives' members - will pry a bill from committee and bring it to the floor for consideration.
Discharge petition
Socioeconomic status (SES)
Political culture
Writ of mandamus
47. Party leader who is the liaison between the leadership and the rank-and-file in the legislature.
Contract clause
Whip
Virginia Plan
Regressive tax
48. Relationships among interest groups - congressional committees and subcommittees - and the government agencies that share a common policy concern.
Equal protection clause
Issue network
Ethnocentrism
Interstate compact
49. The dispensing of government jobs to persons who belong to the winning political party.
National supremacy
Delegate
Patronage
Proportional representation
50. An imbalance in international trade in which the value of imports exceeds the value of exports.
Political socialization
Trade deficit
Speaker
Delegate