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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. The process of putting a law into practice through bureaucratic rules or spending.
Implementation
Idealism
Lobbying
Entitlements
2. Theory that opposes governmental interference in economic affairs beyond what is necessary to protect life and property.
Laissez-faire economics
Congressional-executive agreement
Issue network
Iron triangle
3. 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.
Natural rights
Judicial review
Offshoring
Libertarianism
4. Government policy that attempts to manage the economy by controlling taxing and spending.
Issue advocacy
Ex post facto law
Fiscal policy
Hard power
5. Denial of export - import - or financial relations with the target country in an effort to change that nation's policies.
Single-member district
Bureaucrat
Economic sanctions
Libel
6. Voting based on what a candidate pledges to do in the future about an issue if elected.
Prospective issue voting
Government corporation
Senatorial courtesy
Filibuster
7. The legislative leader selected by the majority party who helps plan party strategy - confers with other party leaders - and tries to keep members of the party in line.
Majority leader
Suffrage
Coattail effect
Inflation
8. 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
Fighting words
Antitrust legislation
National tide
Green party
9. Weakening of partisan preferences that points to a rejection of both major parties and a rise in the number of independents.
Australian ballot
Inflation
Dealignment
Civil law
10. The distribution of individual preferences or evaluations of a given issue - candidate - or institution within a specific population.
Public opinion
Commerce clause
Nonpartisan election
Economic sanctions
11. A committee composed of members of both the House of Representatives and the Senate; such committees oversee the Library of Congress and conduct investigations.
Closed shop
Union shop
Decentralists
Joint committee
12. An official document - published every weekday - which lists the new and proposed regulations of executive departments and regulatory agencies.
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
Federalists
Winner-take-all system
Federal Register
13. Those citizens who follow public affairs carefully.
Competitive federalism
Attentive public
Executive privilege
Seniority rule
14. A technique of Congress to establish federal regulations. These sanctions permit the use of federal money in one program to influence state and local policy in another. For example - a 1984 act reduced federal highway aid by up to 15 percent for any
Treaty
Bicameralism
Federalists
Crossover sanctions
15. A nonprofit association or group operating outside of government that advocates and pursues policy objectives.
Rule-making process
Reapportionment
Nongovernmental organization (NGO)
Jim Crow laws
16. Views the Constitution as giving a limited list of powers—primarily foreign policy and national defense—to the national government - leaving the rest to the sovereign states. Each level of government is dominant within its own sphere. The Supreme Cou
Issue advocacy
Theory of deterrence
Dual federalism (layer cake federalism)
Gerrymandering
17. Clause in the Fifth Amendment limiting the power of the national government; similar clause in the Fourteenth Amendment prohibits the state governments from depriving any person of life - liberty - or property without due process of law.
Due process clause
Equal protection clause
Unemployment
Dealignment
18. Unlimited and undisclosed spending by an individual or group on communications that do not use words like 'vote for' or 'vote against -' although much of this activity is actually about electing or defeating candidates.
Issue advocacy
President pro tempore
Defendant
Delegate
19. 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.
Delegate
Coattail effect
Restrictive covenant
Representative democracy
20. Democratic party primary in the old 'one-party South' that was limited to white people and essentially constituted an election; ruled unconstitutional in Smith v. Allwright (1944).
White primary
Monetary policy
'Necessary and proper' clause
Criminal law
21. A permanent committee established in a legislature - usually focusing on a policy area.
Central clearance
Gross domestic product (GDP)
Standing committee
Independent expenditure
22. 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.
Hard power
Faction
Soft money
Isolationism
23. 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.
Open rule
Treaty
Bush Doctrine
New Jersey Plan
24. Elections in which voters determine party nominees.
Direct orders
Party caucus
Primary election
Preferred position doctrine
25. 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.
De facto segregation
Preferred position doctrine
Precedent
Docket
26. A consistent pattern of beliefs about political values and the role of government.
Antitrust legislation
Immunity
Senior Executive Service
Political ideology
27. The principle of a two-house legislature.
Speaker
Bicameralism
Executive orders
Australian ballot
28. The difference between the revenues raised annually from sources of income other than borrowing and the expenditures of government - including paying the interest on past borrowing.
Extradition
Independent expenditures
Cross-cutting cleavages
Deficit
29. Governance according to the expressed preferences of the majority.
Commercial speech
Majority rule
Coattail effect
Laissez-faire economics
30. Consumer tax on a specific kind of merchandise - such as tobacco.
Nongovernmental organization (NGO)
Excise tax
Bill of attainder
Caucus
31. Clause in the Fourteenth Amendment that forbids any state to deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. By interpretation - the Fifth Amendment imposes the same limitation on the national government. This clause is t
Bipartisanship
Divided government
Equal protection clause
Medicare
32. Segregation imposed by law.
Regulation
Iron triangle
Right of expatriation
De jure segregation
33. In this type of sample - every individual has unknown and random chance of being selected.
Capitalism
Amicus curiae brief
Chief of staff
Random sample
34. Contributions to a state or local party for party-building purposes.
Soft money
'Necessary and proper' clause
The Federalist
Name recognition
35. The widely shared beliefs - values - and norms about how citizens relate to governments and to one another.
Political culture
Presidential election
Confederation
Necessary and proper clause
36. A policy that emphasizes a united front and cooperation between the major political parties - especially on sensitive foreign policy issues.
Impoundment
Virginia Plan
Bipartisanship
Ethnicity
37. Requirement that evidence unconstitutionally or illegally obtained be excluded from a criminal trial.
Political socialization
Exclusionary rule
Regressive tax
Leadership PAC
38. A court with appellate jurisdiction that hears appeals from the decisions of lower courts.
Plea bargain
Direct democracy
Court of appeals
Ethnicity
39. The right of a federal law or a regulation to preclude enforcement of a state or local law or regulation.
Preemption
Monetarism
Marble cake federalism
Suffrage
40. An agency of Congress that analyzes presidential budget recommendations and estimates the cost of proposed legislation.
Labor injunction
Public assistance
Government corporation
Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
41. The residents of a congressional district or state.
Constituents
Executive privilege
Sound bites
Implementation
42. A provision attached to a bill
National Intelligence Director
Administrative discretion
Judicial activism
Rider
43. A close contest; by extension - any contest in which the focus is on who is ahead and by how much rather than on substantive differences between the candidates.
Nongovernmental organization (NGO)
Horse race
National supremacy
Distributive policy
44. Primary election in which any voter - regardless of party - may vote.
Restrictive covenant
Open primary
Nongovernmental organization (NGO)
Conservatism
45. A landmark case in United States law and the basis for the exercise of judicial review in the United States - under Article Three of the United States Constitution. The case resulted from a petition to the Supreme Court by William Marbury - who had b
'Our federalism'
Redistributive policy
Marbury v. Madison
Rule
46. Federal statute barring Federal employees from active participation in certain kinds of politics and protecting them from being fired on partisan grounds.
Commerce clause
Environmental impact statement
Civil law
Hatch Act
47. A belief that ultimate power resides in the people.
Monetary policy
Pluralism
Popular sovereignty
Equal protection clause
48. A provision in a deed to real property prohibiting its sale to a person of a particular race or religion. Judicial enforcement of such deeds is unconstitutional.
Implementation
Restrictive covenant
Open primary
Logrolling
49. Retroactive criminal law that works to the disadvantage of a person.
Turnout
Leadership PAC
Judicial review
Ex post facto law
50. 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).
Movement
Amicus curiae brief
Hard power
Racial gerrymandering