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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. Clause in the Constitution (Article 4 - Section 1) requiring each state to recognize the civil judgments rendered by the courts of the other states and to accept their public records and acts as valid.
Free exercise clause
Special or select committee
Democracy
Full faith and credit clause
2. Election in which voters choose party nominees.
Photo ops
Divided government
Direct primary
Racial profiling
3. Presidential power to strike - or remove - specific items from a spending bill without vetoing the entire package; declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court.
Line item veto
Direct primary
Policy agenda
Party registration
4. An election system in which the candidate with the most votes wins.
Standing committee
Cloture
Federalists
Winner-take-all system
5. The rights of all people to dignity and worth; also called human rights.
Parliamentary system
Natural rights
Standing committee
Collective bargaining
6. Citizenship in more than one nation.
Police powers
Fundamentalists
Dual citizenship
Defendant
7. Procedure for submitting to popular vote the removal of officials from office before the end of their term.
Recall
Commerce clause
Socialism
Minor party
8. A belief that government can and should achieve justice and equality of opportunity.
Rule
Implied powers
Liberalism
Criminal law
9. A local or judicial election in which candidates are not selected or endorsed by political parties and party affiliation is not listed on ballots.
Senatorial courtesy
Treaty
Implied powers
Nonpartisan election
10. Formal orders issued by the president to direct action by the Federal bureaucracy.
Executive orders
Majority rule
Candidate appeal
Judicial restraint
11. A technique of Congress to establish federal regulations. Direct orders must be complied with under threat of criminal or civil sanction. An example is the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972 - barring job discrimination by state and local gover
Fundamentalists
Direct orders
Referendum
Socialism
12. Money raised in unlimited amounts by political parties for party-building purposes. Now largely illegal except for limited contributions to state or local parties for voter registration and get-out-the-vote efforts.
Women's suffrage
Tax expenditure
Soft money
Natural rights
13. Constitutional grant of powers that enables each of the three branches of government to check some acts of the others and therefore ensure that no branch can dominate.
Sales tax
Reinforcing cleavages
Checks and balances
Tariff
14. Arrangement whereby public officials are hired to provide legal assistance to people accused of crimes who are unable to hire their own attorneys.
Direct orders
Public defender system
Candidate appeal
Keynesian economics
15. Statement required by Federal law from all agencies for any project using Federal funds to assess the potential affect of the new construction or development on the environment.
Police powers
Dual federalism (layer cake federalism)
Environmental impact statement
Whip
16. Authority given by Congress to the Federal bureaucracy to use reasonable judgment in implementing the laws.
Safe seat
Minority leader
Commercial speech
Administrative discretion
17. 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.
Immunity
Constitutional Convention
Lobbyist
Necessary and proper clause
18. A convention held in September 1786 to consider problems of trade and navigation - attended by five states and important because it issued the call to Congress and the states for what became the Constitutional Convention.
Annapolis Convention
Redistributive policy
Prior restraint
Movement
19. A policy adopted by the Bush administration in 2001 that asserts America's right to attack any nation that has weapons of mass destruction that might be used against U.S. interests at home or abroad.
Merit system
Bush Doctrine
Sales tax
Cycle of increasing effectiveness
20. An agreement among two or more states. Congress must approve most such agreements.
Progressive tax
Idealism
Interstate compact
Central clearance
21. Quality or state of a work that taken as a whole appeals to a prurient interest in sex by depicting sexual conduct in a patently offensive way and that lacks serious literary - artistic - political - or scientific value.
Obscenity
Union shop
Regulations
Horse race
22. The effort to slow the growth of the federal government by returning many functions to the states.
Devolution revolution
Political socialization
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
Federal Election Commission (FEC)
23. A theory of international relations that focuses on the hope the nations will act together to solve international problems and promote peace.
Pocket veto
Minor party
Idealism
Regulatory taking
24. The current holder of the elected office.
Senatorial courtesy
Filibuster
Express powers
Incumbent
25. Programs such as Medicaid and welfare under which applicants must meet eligibility requirements based on need.
Administrative discretion
Seniority rule
Means-tested entitlements
Social insurance
26. Clause in the First Amendment that states that Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion. The Supreme Court has interpreted this to forbid governmental support to any or all religions.
Establishment clause
Regulation
Pluralism
Federalism
27. 30-second statements on the evening news shows. The media have been accused of simplifying complicated political issues by relying on sound bites to explain them to the public.
Preferred position doctrine
Impeachment
Bundling
Sound bites
28. Clause in the First Amendment that states that Congress shall make no law prohibiting the free exercise of religion.
Constituents
Antitrust legislation
Senior Executive Service
Free exercise clause
29. The legislative leader selected by the minority party as spokesperson for the opposition.
Executive order
Minority leader
Voter registration
Libertarianism
30. A company with a labor agreement under which union membership cannot be required as a condition of employment.
Economic sanctions
Independent agency
Open shop
Minority leader
31. The authority of a court to review decisions made by lower courts.
Political culture
Jim Crow laws
Appellate jurisdiction
Bicameralism
32. Primary election in which any voter - regardless of party - may vote.
Standing committee
Open primary
Procedural due process
National debt
33. An individual who does not to join a group representing his or her interests yet receives the benefit of the group's influence.
Independent regulatory commission
Political socialization
Free rider
State of the Union Address
34. Governance divided between the parties - as when one holds the presidency and the other controls one or both houses of Congress.
Lobbying
Unfunded mandates
Virginia Plan
Divided government
35. Constitutional arrangement in which power is distributed between a central government and subdivisional governments - called states in the United States. The national and the subdivisional governments both exercise direct authority over individuals.
Federalism
Closed shop
Theocracy
Dual citizenship
36. A meeting of party delegates to vote on matters of policy and in some cases to select party candidates for public office.
Cross-cutting requirements
Natural rights
Party convention
Judicial activism
37. 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.
Commerce clause
National tide
Offshoring
Government corporation
38. A committee composed of members of both the House of Representatives and the Senate; such committees oversee the Library of Congress and conduct investigations.
Weapons of mass destruction
Three-fifths compromise
Executive privilege
Joint committee
39. The total output of all economic activity in the nation - including goods and services.
Unemployment
Gross domestic product (GDP)
Fiscal federalism
Hard money
40. International organization derived from the General Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) that promotes it free trade around the world.
World Trade Organization (WTO)
Articles of Confederation
National Intelligence Director
Open shop
41. A requirement the federal government imposes as a condition for receiving federal funds.
Federal mandate
Retrospective issue of voting
Hold
Criminal law
42. Conceives of federalism as a marble cake in which all levels of government are involved in a variety of issues and programs - rather than a layer cake - or dual federalism - with fixed divisions between layers or levels of government.
Contract clause
Affirmative action
Chief of staff
Marble cake federalism
43. Financial contributions by individuals or groups in the hope of influencing the outcome of the election and subsequently influencing policy.
Right of expatriation
Project grants
Issue network
Interested money
44. These are broad state grants to states for prescribed activities—welfare - child care - education - social services - preventive health care - and health services—with only a few strings attached. States have greater flexibility in deciding how to sp
Judicial activism
Medical savings account
Due process clause
Block grants
45. The political arm of an interest group that is legally entitled to raise funds on a voluntary basis from members - stockholders - or employees to contribute funds to candidates or political parties.
Political action committee (PAC)
De jure segregation
American dream
Issue network
46. The means by which individuals can express preferences regarding the development of public policy.
Linkage institutions
Uncontrollable spending
Revolving door
Turnout
47. A rising public approval of the president that follows a crisis as Americans 'rally 'round the flag' and the chief executive.
Fiscal federalism
Adversary system
Rally point
'Our federalism'
48. Employment cycle in which individuals who work for governmental agencies that regulate interests eventually end up working for interest groups or businesses with the same policy concern.
Necessary and proper clause
Revolving door
Interstate compact
Earmarks
49. The inclination to focus on national issues - rather than local issues - in an election campaign. The impact of the national tide can be reduced by the nature of the candidates on the ballot who might have differentiated themselves from their party o
National tide
Deregulation
Bad tendency test
Proportional representation
50. Words that by their very nature inflict injury on those to whom they are addressed or insight them to acts of violence.
Fighting words
Demographics
Constituents
Direct primary