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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. 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.
Jim Crow laws
Environmental impact statement
Eminent domain
Soft money
2. A dispute growing out of an actual case or controversy and that is capable of settlement by legal methods.
Antitrust legislation
De jure segregation
Reinforcing cleavages
Justiciable dispute
3. A formal decision to reject a bill passed by Congress after it adjourns
Commercial speech
amicus curiae brief
Department
Pocket veto
4. Programs that the Federal government requires States to implement without Federal funding.
Unfunded mandates
Hard power
Laissez-faire economics
Caucus
5. 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.
Speaker
Deficit
'Our federalism'
Issue network
6. An economic system characterized by private property - competitive markets - economic incentives - and limited government involvement in the production - distribution - and pricing of goods and services.
Public assistance
Capitalism
Implementation
Opinion of the Court
7. Written defamation of another person. For public officials and public figures - the constitutional tests designed to restrict libel actions are especially rigid.
Judicial review
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
Libel
Grand jury
8. Domination of an industry by a single company; also the company that dominates the industry.
Attentive public
Writ of certiorari
Block grants
Monopoly
9. Theory that opposes governmental interference in economic affairs beyond what is necessary to protect life and property.
Petit jury
Override
Majority rule
Laissez-faire economics
10. Money spent by individuals or groups not associated with candidates to elect or defeat candidates for office.
Independent expenditures
Bush Doctrine
Federal mandate
Federal Election Commission (FEC)
11. Congress appropriates funds for a specific purpose - such as school lunches or for building airports and highways. These funds are allocated by formula and are subject to detailed federal conditions - often on a matching basis; that is - the local go
Distributive policy
Judicial review
Plurality
Categorical-formula grants
12. Congress appropriates a certain sum - which is allocated to state and local units and sometimes to nongovernmental agencies - based on applications from those who wish to participate. Examples are grants by the National Science Foundation to universi
Nonprotected speech
Procedural due process
Project grants
Obscenity
13. A minor party founded by Ross Perot in 1995. It focuses on national government reform - fiscal responsibility - and political accountability. It has recently struggled with internal strife and criticism that it lacks an identity.
Union shop
Nonprotected speech
Reform party
Movement
14. Segregation resulting from economic or social conditions or personal choice.
Confederation
De facto segregation
Medicaid
Enumerated powers
15. A provision attached to a bill
Rider
Parliamentary system
Senatorial courtesy
Rally point
16. 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.
Closed rule
Progressive tax
Concurrent powers
Restrictive covenant
17. A large body of people interested in a common issue - idea - or concern that is of continuing significance and who are willing to take action. Movements seek to change attitudes or institutions - not just policies.
Nonprotected speech
Health maintenance organization (HMO)
Movement
Uncontrollable spending
18. A combination of entitlement programs - paid for by employer and employee taxes - that includes retirement benefits - health insurance - and support for disabled workers and the children of deceased or disabled workers.
Social Security
Attentive public
Primary election
Bill of attainder
19. The process of putting a law into practice through bureaucratic rules or spending.
Appellate jurisdiction
Implementation
Gross domestic product (GDP)
amicus curiae brief
20. 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
Block grants
Majority rule
Candidate appeal
Civil disobedience
21. The idea that a just government must derive its powers from the consent of the people it governs.
Popular consent
Federal Election Commission (FEC)
American dream
Opinion of the Court
22. The belief that nations must engage in international problem solving.
Parliamentary system
Women's suffrage
Proportional representation
Internationalism
23. An agency of Congress that analyzes presidential budget recommendations and estimates the cost of proposed legislation.
Soft money
Offshoring
Congressional Budget Office (CBO)
Senior Executive Service
24. Holding incumbents - usually the president's party - responsible for their records on issues - such as the economy or foreign policy.
Due process clause
Express powers
Retrospective issue of voting
Selective incorporation
25. Remedial action designed to overcome the effects of discrimination against minorities and women.
Decentralists
Caucus
Caucus
Affirmative action
26. Programs such as unemployment insurance - disaster relief - or disability payments that provide benefits to all eligible citizens.
Bush Doctrine
Incumbent
Entitlements
Pocket veto
27. Compromise between northern and southern states at the Constitutional Convention that three-fifths of the slave population would be counted for determining direct taxation and representation in the House of Representatives.
Representative democracy
Direct orders
Three-fifths compromise
Coattail effect
28. Electoral system used in electing the president and vice president - in which voters vote for electors pledged to cast their ballots for particular party's candidates.
Electoral college
Natural law
Free exercise clause
Criminal law
29. 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
Women's suffrage
Executive Office of the President
Political predisposition
Necessary and proper clause
30. The right of women to vote.
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31. 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
Senatorial courtesy
Unilateralism
Competitive federalism
32. A small political party that rises and falls with a charismatic candidate or - if composed of ideologies on the right or left - usually persists over time; also called a third party.
Entitlement programs
Fiscal policy
Minor party
Collective bargaining
33. A technique of Congress to establish federal regulations. Total preemption rests on the national governments power under the supremacy and commerce clauses to preempt conflicting state and local activity. Building on this constitutional authority - f
Cycle of increasing effectiveness
Total and Partial Preemption
Socioeconomic status (SES)
Trustee
34. A local or judicial election in which candidates are not selected or endorsed by political parties and party affiliation is not listed on ballots.
Public opinion
Monopoly
Cross-cutting requirements
Nonpartisan election
35. Promoting a particular position or an issue by interest groups or individuals but not candidates. Much issue advocacy is often electioneering for or against a candidate and - until 2004 had not been subject to regulation.
Issue advocacy
Tax expenditure
Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
Prior restraint
36. A tactic in which PACs collect contributions from like-minded individuals (each limited to $2000) and present them to a candidate or political party as a 'bundle -' thus increasing the PAC's influence.
Bundling
Oversight
The Federalist
Bicameralism
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.
Pocket veto
Commerce clause
Referendum
Clear and present danger test
38. 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.
Direct primary
Ethnicity
Trustee
Total and Partial Preemption
39. A procedure for terminating debate - especially filibusters - in the Senate.
Cloture
Soft money
Unitary system
Plea bargain
40. The candidate or party that wins more than half the votes cast in an election.
Criminal law
Majority
Hard power
Regulation
41. A meeting of party delegates to vote on matters of policy and in some cases to select party candidates for public office.
Chief of staff
Direct orders
Offshoring
Party convention
42. A tax graduated so that people with higher incomes pay larger fraction of their income than people with lower incomes.
Preferred position doctrine
Impeachment
Libertarian party
Progressive tax
43. Presidential custom of submitting the names of perspective appointees for approval to senators from the states in which the appointees are to work.
Executive privilege
Senatorial courtesy
Means-tested entitlements
Majority
44. 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.
Normal trade relations
Nongovernmental organization (NGO)
Ethnicity
Marble cake federalism
45. A commission created by the 1974 amendments to the Federal Election Campaign Act to administer election reform laws. It consists of six commissioners appointed by president and confirmed by the Senate. Its duties include overseeing disclosure of camp
Political socialization
Bureaucrat
Federal Election Commission (FEC)
Recall
46. Governance divided between the parties - as when one holds the presidency and the other controls one or both houses of Congress.
Divided government
Closed rule
Nonprotected speech
State's rights
47. Elections held midway between presidential elections.
Constituents
Selective incorporation
Midterm election
Patronage
48. A procedural rule in the House of Representatives that prohibits any amendments to bills or provides that only members of the committee reporting the bill may offer amendments.
Prior restraint
Shays's Rebellion
Closed rule
Equal protection clause
49. Federal laws (starting with the Sherman Act of 1890) that tried to prevent a monopoly from dominating an industry and restraining trade.
Independent expenditure
Fiscal federalism
Antitrust legislation
Soft money
50. The rule of precedent - whereby a rule or law contained in a judicial decision is commonly viewed as binding on judges whenever the same question is presented.
Excise tax
Independent agency
Precedent
Stare decisis