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Download AP GOPO MOST IMPORTANT CONCEPTS Unit 1: Constitutional
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AP GOPO MOST IMPORTANT CONCEPTS Unit 1: Constitutional Underpinnings and Federalism Vocabulary government vs. politics reserved powers Antifederalists vs. Federalists hyperpluralism single-issue groups block grant vs. categorical grant individualism supremacy clause checks and balances vs separation of powers judicial review unitary governments (system) limited government writ of habeas corpus linkage institutions Government Actions majority rule vs. minority rights Americans with Disabilities Act (1990) mandates Welfare Reform Act (1996) natural rights 10th Amendment New Jersey Plan vs. Virginia Plan Government actions Bill of Rights constitution democracy devolution double jeopardy dual federalism vs. cooperative federalism elastic clause (necessary and proper clause) elitism (elite and class theory) enumerated (expressed or delegated) powers vs. implied powers factions federalism fiscal federalism pluralism (pluralist theory) policy agenda policy gridlock popular sovereignty (consent of the governed) public policy Federalist Papers Gibbons v. Ogden Great Compromise (Connecticut Compromise) Marbury v. Madison McCulloch v. Maryland republic (representative democracy) Analyze • Direct democracy vs. representative democracy (republic) • Formal vs. informal amendment process to the Constitution • How the balance of power between the states and federal government has changed over time, and by what means this has occurred • Part of national government most closely tied to citizens in original Constitution • Powers unique to the House or Senate • Problems of the Articles of Confederation and how these were addressed in the Constitution • Why framers wanted a bicameral legislature • Aspects of federalism (the different types and how they work) • Margins required by different actions of Congress • Core values of U.S. political culture • Challenges to democracy that we discussed in class • Elements of the policymaking process Unit 2: Civil Rights and Liberties Vocabulary affirmative action Voting Rights Act of 1965 bill of attainder Fourteenth Amendment citizenship clause Nineteenth Amendment civil liberties vs. civil rights Baker v. Karr clear and present danger test Barron v. Baltimore cruel and unusual punishment Brown v. Board of Education De jure vs. de facto segregation Engel v. Vitale due process clause Gideon v. Wainwright equal protection clause Gitlow v. New York establishment clause vs. free exercise clause Griswold v. Connecticut ex post facto law Grutter v. Bollinger exclusionary rule Lemon v. Kurtzman libel Mapp v. Ohio Miranda warnings Miranda v. Arizona plea bargaining New York Times v. Sullivan prior restraint Oregon v. Smith probable cause Planned Parenthood v. Casey right to privacy (how implied in 1st, 4th, 9th Amendments) Plessy v. Ferguson selective incorporation (incorporation doctrine) Reynolds v. U.S. self-incrimination Roe v. Wade strict scrutiny Roth v. U.S. symbolic speech Schenck v. U.S. Texas v. Johnson Government actions Amendments that expand suffrage (15 , 19 , 23 , 24 , 26 ) Tinker v. Des Moines Bill of Rights (Amendments 1-10) Weeks v. U.S. th Civil Rights Act of 1964 th rd th th Unit 3: Public Opinion, Political Parties & Interest Groups Vocabulary political action committee (PAC) coalition political culture critical election political efficacy demographics/demography political ideology divided government political participation electioneering political party exit poll political socialization free-rider problem public interest lobbies gender gap public opinion interest group random sampling litigation rational-choice theory lobbying responsible party model minority majority sampling error party dealignment (party neutrality) vs. party realignment single-issue groups party eras ticket splitting (split-ticket voting) party identification winner-take-all system vs. proportional representation party platform Analyze • Trends in voting behavior (turnout rates, split-ticket voting, party loyalties, demographics, etc.) • Decline in trust—correlation with increase in investigative journalism • Political activities of citizens • Link between political action, party identification, and socioeconomics • Influences in political socialization • Decline in party identification – causes and effects • Types, characteristics, and impact of primaries • Reasons for two-party system/Challenges for third parties • Critical elections – 1800, 1860, 1932, 1968, 1980 – know party realignment • Party identification and voting • Party coalitions Interest Groups • Methods used by interest groups to influence the political process • Reasons for rise of interest groups • Goals and functions of parties and interest groups and how the two differ • Purpose and functions of PACs • Techniques used by interest groups – lobbying, grassroots mobilization, litigation • Regulation of interest groups • How interest groups and political parties support each other Unit 4: Campaigns, Elections and Mass Media Vocabulary PAC vs. Super PACs 527 group v. 501(c) group plurality election battleground states (swing states) policy voting vs. retrospective voting campaign contributions presidential primary vs. general election campaign strategy press conferences caucus (state party) vs. primary referendum civic duty selective exposure vs. selective perception closed primary vs. open primary single-member district Electoral College soft money vs. hard money frontloading sound bites horse-race journalism superdelegates independent expenditures trial balloons initiative investigative journalism invisible primary Government actions legitimacy Buckley v. Valeo mandate theory of elections Citizens United v. FEC mass media Federal Communication Commission (FCC) media chains Federal Election Campaign Act media event Federal Election Commission narrowcasting McGovern-Fraser Commission national party convention Motor Voter Act nomination Analyze • Reasons for low voter turnout in the U.S. • News media influence on policy • Direct and indirect elections • Electoral college and presidential campaign strategy • Reasons why the electoral college has not been abolished • How electoral college helps to reinforce two-party system • Balance vice president candidate provides to ticket in presidential elections Unit 5: Congress Vocabulary bill caucus (congressional) bicameral legislature cloture casework committee chair conference committees legislative oversight congressional redistricting logrolling delegate role of representation (instructed delegates) vs. majority leader trustee role of representation minority leader filibuster politico role of representation franking privilege pork barrel gerrymandering seniority system House Rules committee Speaker of the House House Ways and Means Committee standing committees vs. select committees incumbent whips joint committees Analyze • Role legislative oversight has over the power of the president and bureaucracy • Incumbency advantage and why it occurs • Differences between Senate and House (number of members, term in office, size of constituency, qualifications, level of policy knowledge, media coverage, prestige, and partisanship, rules for debate) • Congressional checks and balances • Unique jurisdiction of each chamber/special formal powers Constitution provides • Leadership roles in Congress • Founding Fathers’ intent for the legislative process • Committee membership and policy specialization • Majority party advantages • Reasons for greater competition for Senate seats • Types of committees and differences between them • Importance of the committee system Unit 6: The President and the Bureaucracy Vocabulary standard operating procedures veto administrative discretion bureaucracy street-level bureaucrats executive order regulation iron triangle command-and-control policy policy agenda incentive system independent regulatory agency deregulation independent executive agency Government actions line-item veto executive agreement executive privilege lame-duck period issue network impeachment pocket veto presidential coattails government corporation 22nd Amendment 25th Amendment War Powers Resolution Pendleton Civil Service Act Hatch Act Federal Election Campaign Act United States v. Nixon Korematsu v. United States Analyze • Sources of presidential power (formal and informal) • How/why presidential power has increased in the post-World War II era • Presidential control/lack of control of the cabinet • Pros and cons of using cabinet members as advisors • Presidential influence on legislation • Presidential influence on the judiciary • How party polarization limits president’s influence on policymaking • Pros and cons of the line-item veto (why does the president not have one?) • How the veto power affects the President’s relationship with Congress • Impeachment process • How executive agreements circumvent the formal approval process of treaties • Roles of the president v. Congress in terms of foreign policy • Lame-duck period, and how this limits presidential influence • How new cabinet-level departments are formed • Council of Economic Advisors, Office of Management Budget and National Security Council – areas of responsibility • Advantages bureaucrats have over the president in areas of policymaking • White House staff – who are they, and how are they chosen? • Congressional oversight of the bureaucracy • How independent regulatory agencies differ from other bureaucratic entities Unit 7: The Judiciary Vocabulary amicus curiae brief appellate jurisdiction vs. original jurisdiction class action suits courts of appeal district courts judicial activism vs. judicial restraint judicial implementation judicial review (written) opinion Originalism (original intent theory) precedents political questions rule of four senatorial courtesy solicitor general standing to sue stare decisis statutory construction Supreme Court writ of certiorari Analyze • District courts vs. courts of appeal (compare/contrast three levels of federal judicial system) • Central issues and impact of the Marshall, Warren, Burger, Rehnquist and Roberts’ Courts • Supreme Court Justices term length (amount of time and Founding Father’s reasoning) • Who establishes the federal court system and number of judges? • Nomination and approval process for federal judges • Selection process for the Supreme Court’s caseload • Original intent theory vs. “living constitution” theory Unit 8: Public Policy (Economic, Domestic and Foreign) Vocabulary monetary policy domestic policy vs. foreign policy Government groups fiscal policy Federal Reserve System entitlement programs Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) deficit Secretary of State tax expenditures Secretary of Defense incrementalism Joint Chiefs of Staff uncontrollable expenditures Central Intelligence Agency budget resolution House Ways and Means Committee reconciliation Senate Finance Committee authorization bill Congressional Budget Office (CBO) appropriations bill Office of Management and Budget (OMB) continuing resolutions United Nations (UN) mixed economy Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) unemployment rate Government actions inflation Keynesian economic theory supply-side economics means-tested programs poverty line feminization of poverty interdependency revenues national debt social welfare policies progressive tax Sixteenth Amendment Medicaid Medicare Social Security Act of 1935 Clean Air Act of 1970 Budget and Impoundment Control Act of 1974 Welfare Reform Act of 1996 No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 Affordable Care Act of 2009 American recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 Analyze • Area of policy which President has stronger control over than Congress • Federal budgetary process (from proposal to approval) • Fiscal Policy vs. Monetary Policy • Executive and Legislative branches’ role in fiscal policy • Importance of the Federal Reserve’s independence • Entitlement programs vs. means-tested programs • Concerns with entitlement programs and how they are considered uncontrollable expenditures • Consequences of running a budget deficit and the accumulation of national debt