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Political Science 12
Prof. Fezell Spr. Qtr.
77
Political Studies
Undergraduate 1
06/07/2011

Additional Political Studies Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
Progressive Movement
Definition
1800's, shift in power from elites to the public, helped clean up government, gave responsibility to people
Term
Changer resulting from direct primaries
Definition
-Elevated importance of early nomination of party candidate
-Encouraged candidates to start campaigns much earlier
-Prompted states to hold their elections
-Increased the importance of campaign funds
-Weakened influence of state party organizations
Term
Nominations Procedure
Definition
-Pres. Primaries
-General Election
-Electoral college election
Term
FECA
Definition
-Federal Election Campaign Act (1971) required disclosure of donations and expenditures.
Term
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act (2002)
Definition
Banned all soft money and prohibited non=profit and for=profit 'advocacy' groups, unions, and corporations from running TV/radio ads:
-60 days before a general election
-30 days before a primary election
Term
McConnell v. FEC (2003)
Definition
Upheld the Nipartisan Campaign Reform Act
Term
Citizens United v. FEC (2010)
Definition
Corporations and unions exempted from FEC
Term
Civil Liberties v. Civil Rights
Definition
Liberties: freedoms from the government
Rights: what the government provides for citizens
Term
Selective Incorporation
Definition
Courts deliberating on which way a state is to follow the laws of the Constitution in the states, so as to not infringe on civil liberties.
Term
Fiscal Policy and Limitations
Definition
The total of government taxing and spending decisions (determines deficit or surplus).
Term
Keynesian Economic Policy
Definition
John M. Keynes. Buisness cycles fluctuate due to imbalance between aggregate demand (total income spent by every sector on goods and services) and productive capacity (total vale of goods and services that can be produces when govt. is working at full capacity). -When AGD>PRC, Inflation -When AGD
Term
Monetarist Economic Policy
Definition
Monetary supply more important than tax and spend policies.
Term
High supply of money yeilds...
Low supply of money yeilds...
Definition
-Low interest rate, economic growth
-High interest rate, slower growth
Term
Tax burden
Definition
Total level at which Americans are taxed
Term
Tax Base
Definition
income, property, sales tax
Term
Tax preferences
Definition
special tax treatments (tuition, tax credit, deductions for charitable donations)
Term
Progressive Tax
Definition
Tax structured so that higher-income people pay a higher percentage of their income in taxes, while lower-income people pay a lower percentage
Term
Regressive Tax
Definition
A tax structured so that low income people pay a higher percentage of their income to taxes (social security tax).
Term
Social Security Act of 1935
Definition
Established social security to help older population financially.
Term
Medicare (1965) and Social Security (1935) are under the third ______ of politics, meaning...
Definition
Third rail of politics, meaning they are untouchable by politicians.
Term
Public Assistance to Poor Families
Definition
TANF - Temporary Assistance to Needy Families
Food stamps
Supplemental Security Income
Rent Subsidies
Medicaid
State Children's Health Insurance Program
Term
Education Funding at state and federal level
Definition
91% of funding at state level, 9% at federal level
Term
Regulatory Policy
Definition
Rules and standards that control economic, social, and political activities.
They are used to combat natural monopolies, negative externalities, and incomplete information.
Term
Bureaucracy
Definition
A central group that implements the actions of the government, or any organization or corporation. The bureaucracy divides power, makes changes, and sets policy.
Bureaucracy can be 'overstaffed, inflexible, unresponsive, and power hungry'
Consists of 'hierarchical organization of official with responsibility for specific tasks'.
The 'brain' of the government.
Term
US Bureaucracy consists of:
Definition
-Departments (state, treasury, justice, interior, agriculture,commerce, 15 in all)
-Independent Agencies (NASA, CIA, EPA, FEMA)
-Government Corporations (USPS, Amtrak, FDIC)
-Independent Regulatory Commissions (FCC, CPSC)
Term
Characteristics of a Model Bureaucracy
Definition
-Hierarchy
-Specialization
-Explicit Rules
-Merit
Term
Problems with a bureaucracy
Definition
-Impossible tasks
-Difficulty measuring performance
-Expansionary tendencies
-Slow to change
-Red tape (specific rules and regulations made in an equal manner)
Term
Three eras of bureaucracy in the US
Definition
-Gov. by gentlemen (1787-1829)
-Spoils System (1829-1883)
-The Civil Service System (1883-present)
-Now based on WHAT you know, not WHO you know.
Term
What causes growth?
Definition
-Domestic or international crisis
-Class conflicts (labor v. management an example)
-The evolving complexity of society
Term
5 functions of a bureaucracy
Definition
-Takes direction from president
-Takes direction from congress
-Promote public welfare
-Provide national security
-Maintain a strong economy
Term
3 main tasks of a bureaucracy as set out by congress
Definition
-Administer rules
-Make rules
-Judiciate rules
Term
3 possible solutions for the problem of 'big government'
Definition
-Termination - ending it all
-Devolution - distributing the power to the states
-Privatization - moving a program from the public to the private sector
Term
The 3 powers of the presidency
Definition
-Expressed - specific powers granted by the Constitution
-Delegated - Constitutional powers exercised by another agency
-Inherent - claimed powers not expressed in the Constitution
Term
5 expressed powers of the presidency
Definition
-Military power - Commander in Chief
-Judicial power - pardons
-Diplomatic power - to make treaties
-Executive power - see that laws are enacted
-Legislative power - veto
Term
Inherent powers, as seen in history (established by custom/precedent, not law)
Definition
-Executive order - telling agency to take specific action
-Dismissal power - can dismiss any office holders
-'Soft Powers' - bargaining, 'going public', agenda setting
Term
After Reagan, the office of the presidency has slowly ________ power (grown, lost)
Definition
Grown power
Term
Liberties taken by the President due to 9/11
Definition
-Wiretapping
-Suspension of habeas corpus
-Secrecy in White House
Term
Bicameral system
Definition
House of reps (based on population) and Senate (2 per state)
Term
The House
Definition
-435 (larger than senate)
-2 year terms
-hierarchical
-acts quickly
Term
The Senate
Definition
-100 (smaller)
-6 year terms
-informal procedures
-acts slowly
-generalists
Term
Filibuster
Definition
Senators may have the floor as long as they wish in deliberation process. A filibuster is the strategy to talk so long that a bill is stalled.
-Invoking cloture - a supermajority (60 senators/100)vote can end a filibuster
Term
Barriers to Legislation
Definition
-Attention
-Hearings
-Subcommittee majority
-Committee majority
-Getting to the floor (speaker discretion, hold/filibuster risk)
-Floor passage
-House-Senate agreement
-Presidential approval
-Supreme Court review
Term
Micro v. Macro Representation
Definition
-Micro: a representative that reps a constituency
-Macro: congress representing the nation
Term
Organization of Congress (3 sects)
Definition
-Specialization - delegates that specialize in an area to serve a constituency
-Reciprocity - connections between members who specialize
-Comittees
Term
Congress committee assignment criteria
Definition
-Member prefs
-Seniority
-Loyal to leaders
-Balance for powerful comittees
Term
Changes in Congress (before and after 1950's)
Definition
-Less committee/chair power
-More power in caucus
-More power in individual
-Seniority less important
Term
Legislative Reograization Act of 1946 gave congressmen:
Definition
-Staff
-District offices
-Trips home
-Congressional support agencies
Term
Congress (house and senate) has ______ minority representation
Definition
Insufficient minority representation
Term
Hierarchy of the US Federal Court System
Definition
-Supreme Court
-US Court of Appeals (13, only allows evidence seen in district courts)
-US District Courts (94 courts) first court to hear a case
Term
Biggest Judicial Power of the Court
Definition
Judicial review (Marbury v. Madison (1803)
Term
3 theories of Constitutional interpretation of the purpose of the courts
Definition
-Original Intent Theory
-Plain-Meaning of the Text Theory
-Living-Constitution Theory
Term
Theories of Representation
Definition
-Madisonian Theory
-Pluralism
-Party Theory
Term
Pluralism
Definition
The result of many special interest groups combating over issues and balancing out legislation (people with more extreme views balance one another out).
Term
Values Underlying Party Theory
Definition
-Political Equality
-Electoral Democracy
-Conflict and Disperse Power (holding reps. responsible complicated)
Term
Party Theory Program
Definition
-Support contagion of conflict and easy voting accessibility
-Strengthen party organizations, so they will be held accountable
-Impose party discipline
-Provision of a clear choice
-Concentrate governmental power in the hands of the winning majority
Party competition in and between elections
Term
Criticisms of Party Theory
Definition
-Oversimplifies electoral choices
-Little account for interest groups
Term
Difference in Pluralism and Party theory regarding Conflict/Dispersed Power
Definition
-Pluralism: many special interest groups in govt. keep themselves in check, prevent government tyranny
-Conflict between parties attracts citizens, dispersed power diffuses accountability and responsibility
Term
Positive effects to political parties
Definition
-Organizes govt.
-Focus responsibility for govt. actions
-Developing issues to educate public
-Synthesizing interests
-Recruiting and developing talent
-Simplifying electoral system
Term
Negative effects to political parties
Definition
-Capturing govt. power and dictating
-Confusing responsibility
-Suppressing the issues
-Dividing society
-Recruiting candidates for the wrong reasons
-Oversimplifying electoral system
Term
Progressive Era Reforms (1890-1920)
Definition
Allowed people to vote privately, advocated for the Merit of Civil service.
Term
Spatial Model of Elections
Definition
All political issues are on a single dimension/plane, including voters, parties, and politicians. People vote for candidate closest to them on the scale.
Term
Spatial Model: Median Voter Theorum
Definition
A candidate has the best chance of winning an election/gaining support if they position themselves in the middle of this plane, where the median voter is positioned (50%).
Term
Duverger's Law (1963)
Definition
'The simple-majority, single-ballot system favors two-party system.' (Party overrepresentation, if a party gets 51% of the vote, they get 100% of the power)
Term
Congressman are 'single-minded seekers of re-election.' This is seen through three main actions:
Definition
-Advertising
-Credit-claiming
-Position taking
Term
Pluralism
Definition
“a school of thought holding that politics is the clash of groups that represent all important interests in society and that check and balance each other.”
Term
3 things that have led to proliferation of interest groups:
Definition
-Historical trends
-Political changes
-Technological changes
Term
Methods to overcome the free-rider problem:
Definition
-coercion
-social movement
-increasing perceived impact
-selective benefits
-patrons and political entrepreneurs
Term
What do interest groups do?
Definition
-Govt. lobbying
-Grassroot lobbying (letter writing campaign)
-Electioneering and political action comittees
-Persuading the public
-Direct action (boycotts, rebellions, etc.)
-Help provide litigation
Term
Lobbyists provide _______ and _______ for members of congress in exchange for their representation.
Definition
Money and Information
Term
Types of interest groups that exist
Definition
-Economic interest groups (25%, largest category)
-Citizen groups (Public interest, ALCU, etc.)
-Governmental interest groups
Term
Iron Triangles
Definition
An alliance based on common interests formed from a powerful interest group, Congressional committee, and an agency of the executive branch.
-Spec. Interest Group<=>Executive Branch<=>Legislative Branch
Term
Mor interest groups has led us to the creation of 'issue networks', which are:
Definition
A loose network of elected officials, public officials, activists, and interest groups that are drawn together by a specific policy issue.
Term
Civic v. Political Engagement
Definition
Political: activity that has the intent of influencing government action

Civic: organized voluntary activity focused on problem solving and helping others.
Term
Political Engagement Equation
Definition
V=pB-C(+D)

V=vote or no vote
p=probability of voting
B=personal utility or benefit of voting
C=cost of voting
D=citizen duty, feeling of goodwill and patriotism behind voting
Term
Civic Volunteerism Model: People participate more if they have...
Definition
-Resources
-Psychological engagement
-Recruitment
Term
Michigan Voting Model: People decide how to vote based on... (in order of importance)
Definition
-Party Identification
-Candidate Characteristics
-Positions on the Issues
Term
Why don't people vote? (3 main reasons)
Definition
-Declining personal benefits
-Declining levels of mobilization (only two clear winners nowadays)
-Declining social connectedness (more focus on the individual)
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