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AP Government and Politics (Ch. 9)
Wilson, Dilulio, and Bose's
17
Civics
10th Grade
11/09/2011

Additional Civics Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Define "Political Party".
Definition
A group that seeks to elect candidates to political office by supplying them with a label ("Party I.D.") by which they are known to the electorate.
Term
What are the arenas of politics in which parties have an existence?
Definition

- Labels in the minds of the voters.

-Organization recuiting and campaining for candidates.

-Set of leaders trying to organize and control the legislative and executive branches.

(If you mentioned judicial, then you're wrong because the judicial branch doesn't "run for elections")

Term
What can be said about US parties in all three of the arenas?
Definition
They have grown weaker.
Term

European parties can be considered "Disciplined Gatekeepers". Why is that?

 

Definition

Because the process in which candidates go through is more thoughtful, dedicated, and requires you to go through a nomination process.

 

(in America, Joe the Plumber can just decide to run for office).

Term

There are four "phases" in history where realignments have happened. What are they?

 

(Not looking for specifics!)

Definition

-Founding-1820's

-Jackson-Civil War

-Civil War-"Sectionalism"

-The Era of Reform

Term

What are some important things about the Founding-1820's era?

 

(Things like which were the two major parties, what was/were the issue(s), who made up both sides (in terms of types of people))

Definition

It was:

-Federalists (G. Wash and J. Adams) vs. "Jacksonian Republicans"

-The issues were: interpretation of the Constitution, Power level of gov't.

-The Republicans won.

-Both sides were just small groups of nobles.

Term

Describe the specifics of the "Jackson-Civil War" realignment.

 

(Things like which were the two major parties, what was/were the issue(s), who made up both sides (in terms of types of people))

Definition

-Democrats vs. Whigs

-Formation of the GOP Republican Party.

-Political Participation skyrockets.

-By 1852, Presidential candidates chosen to run by popular vote.

-Parties built from bottom --> up.

-Abandonned Caucuses.

Term

Describe the specifics of the Civil War-"Sectionalism" era.

 

(Things like which were the two major parties, what was/were the issue(s), who made up both sides (in terms of types of people))

Definition

-Jacksonian system unable to survive slavery and sectionalism.

-New Republicans were dominant because of Union pride (North v. South Union, not work Union).

-Bryan's alienation of northen Democrats deepened Sectionalsim.

-Most states dominated by just one party.

Term

Describe the details of the "Era of Reform"

 

 

(Things like which were the two major parties, what was/were the issue(s), who made up both sides (in terms of types of people))

Definition

-Progressives came to power.

   -They pushed to curtail the parties' power and influence.

-Primary elections were favored, and were non-partisan on a state/local level.

-No party-business alliances.

-Strict voter registration laws.

-Civil service reforms reduced patronage.

Term

How is a realignment defined?

 

What are the two kinds?

 

Definition

-A critical period when a sharp, lasting shift occurs in the coaltition supporting one or both parties.

 

The two kinds are when:

-A major party is forced into extinction.

-Two parties continue, but loyalty shifts from one to another.

Term
Have there been any realignments since 1932? If so, what are the details on those?
Definition

-There have been NO realignments since 1932.

-The closest one to a realignment was in 1980, but it wasn't actually one.

-Reagan won, but because of what he stood for, not becasue he simply wasn't Jimmy Carter.

-The reason why it wasn't one is because Congress was left in the hands of the Dems.

--Also, in the span between 1994 and 2004, the South voted more Republican than the nation as a whole.

Term
Lately, eveidence suggests that parties are declining, not realigning. Is this true? If so, how?
Definition

-It is true.

-It is declinging because fewer people are identifying with a party every year.

-This was unheard of back in the 19th century.

-It became more common when office-bloc ballots were introduced.

 

Term

What is another name for an Office-bloc ballot?

What is its defining feature?

 

Definition

-Also called a "Massachusets Ballot"

-Its main feature is how it lists people. It lists them by the position they are running for, not their party.

Term
What does the National Party structure look like today?
Definition

(Highest)               National Convention                                |

               National Comittee

              |

                     Congressional Campaign Comittee

              |

            National Chair

Term
What format does our political party system follow? What makes it so unique? What are some of its defining features?
Definition

-It is a Two-Party system.

-It is special because it is rare among nations.

-It is evenly balanced nationally, but not locally.

-Electoral system: Winner-take-all, plurality system. That is what limits the # of parties.

-Opinions of voters: Two broad coalitions work, although there may be some bitterness at times.

Term
What are some types of "minor parties"
Definition

-Ideological parties (based on one issue)

-Economic protest parties (self-explanatory)

-Factional parties (influence public policy heavily)

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