mass media
agenda setting
party press
muckraking
digital paywall
television
Jimmy Carter
Citizen journalism
prior restraint
sunshine laws
Political parties
Federalist
personal politics
Populist
two-party
Plurality voting
proportional representation
critical election
Party identifiers
Divided government
25
6
bicameral legislature; 535
filibuster
apportionment
Kevin McCarthy
Charles Schumer
standing
incumbent
bill
War Powers Resolution
executive agreements
executive order
cabinet
president pro tempore; Senate
signing statement
Constitution
Franklin Roosevelt
executive privilege
veto
William Howard Taft
adversarial system
Article III
Congress
jurisdiction
Fourteenth Amendment
Judicial review
Alexander Hamilton
Marbury v. Madison
John Jay
Ronald Reagan
Democratic
Rufus Bullock
Butch Miller
Brad Raffensperger
Burt Jones
Court of Appeals
probate
agriculture
the coverage area assigned to journalists for news or stories
the idea that media affect a citizen’s worldview through the information presented
an FCC policy that all candidates running for office must be given the same radio and television airtime opportunities
a 1949 Federal Communications Commission (FCC) policy, now defunct, that required holders of broadcast licenses to cover controversial issues in a balanced manner
the process of giving a news story a specific context or background
a federal statute that requires public agencies to provide certain types of information requested by citizens
the idea that information is placed in a citizen’s brain and accepted
laws that limit indecent and obscene material on public airwaves
printed information about a person or organization that is not true and harms the reputation of the person or organization
the idea that the media have little effect on citizens
the process of predisposing readers or viewers to think a particular way
biased communication intended to improve the image of people, companies, or organizations
the right of a journalist to keep a source confidential
spoken information about a person or organization that is not true and harms the reputation of the person or organization
news presented in an entertaining style
sensationalized coverage of scandals and human interest stories
a process of cooperation through compromise
the manipulation of legislative districts in an attempt to favor a particular candidate
a type of election in which the winning candidate must receive at least 50 percent of the votes, even if a run-off election is required
the legislative party with over half the seats in a legislative body, and thus significant power to control the agenda
the legislative party with less than half the seats in a legislative body
an individual who falls in the middle of the ideological spectrum
individuals who represent themselves in public as being part of a party
the formal structure of the political party and the active members responsible for coordinating party behavior and supporting party candidates
the collection of a party’s positions on issues it considers politically important
the shift of party positions from moderate towards ideological extremes
a shifting of party alliances within the electorate
party identifiers who have been elected to office and are responsible for fulfilling the party’s promises
members of the voting public who consider themselves part of a political party or who consistently prefer the candidates of one party over the other
an organization that secures votes for a party’s candidates or supports the party in other ways, usually in exchange for political favors such as a job in government
the lowest level of party organization, usually organized around neighborhoods
the reallocation of House seats between the states to account for population changes
the redrawing of electoral maps
a district drawn so members of a party can be assured of winning by a comfortable margin
the process in which voters change party allegiances in response to shifts in party position
political parties formed as an alternative to the Republican and Democratic parties, also known as minor parties
a parliamentary process to end a debate in the Senate, as a measure against the filibuster; invoked when three-fifths of senators vote for the motion
the relationship between Congress and the United States as a whole, and whether the institution itself represents the American people
a special type of joint committee that reconciles different bills passed in the House and Senate so a single bill results
the body of voters, or constituents, represented by a particular politician
a model of representation in which representatives feel compelled to act on the specific stated wishes of their constituents
the extent to which a body of representatives represents the descriptive characteristics of their constituencies, such as class, race, ethnicity, and gender
the powers given explicitly to the federal government by the Constitution to regulate interstate and foreign commerce, raise and support armies, declare war, coin money, and conduct foreign affairs
the powers not specifically detailed in the U.S. Constitution but inferred as necessary to achieve the objectives of the national government
the powers neither enumerated nor implied but assumed to exist as a direct result of the country’s existence
a legislative committee consisting of members from both chambers that investigates certain topics but lacks bill referral authority
the leader of the majority party in either the House or Senate; in the House, the majority leader serves under the Speaker of the House, in the Senate, the majority leader is the functional leader and chief spokesperson for the majority party
the amending and voting process in a congressional committee
the party member who directs the activities of the minority party on the floor of either the House or the Senate
the right to review and monitor other bodies such as the executive branch
a model of representation in which members of Congress act as either trustee or delegate, based on rational political calculations about who is best served, the constituency or the nation
federal spending intended to benefit a particular district or set of constituents
the senator who acts in the absence of the actual president of the Senate, who is also the vice president of the United States; the president pro tempore is usually the most senior senator of the majority party
an elected leader’s looking out for constituents while carrying out the duties of the office
a small legislative committee created to fulfill a specific purpose and then disbanded; also called an ad hoc, or special, committee
the presiding officer of the House of Representatives and the leader of the majority party; the Speaker is second in the presidential line of succession, after the vice president
a theory proposing that the surge of stimulation occurring during presidential elections subsides during midterm elections, accounting for the differences we observe in turnouts and results
a model of representation in which representatives feel at liberty to act in the way they believe is best for their constituents
in the House and in the Senate, a high leadership position whose primary duty is to enforce voting discipline in the chambers and conferences
Theodore Roosevelt’s notion of the presidency as a platform from which the president could push an agenda
the administrative organization that reports directly to the president and made up of important offices, units, and staff of the current president and headed by the White House chief of staff
a term for when the president delivers a major television address in the hope that public pressure will result in legislators supporting the president on a major piece of legislation
the act of charging a government official with serious wrongdoing, which in some cases may lead to the removal of that official from office
an informal meeting held in the nineteenth century, sometimes called a congressional caucus, made up of legislators in the Congress who met to decide on presidential nominees for their respective parties
a power created through law in 1996 and overturned by the Supreme Court in 1998 that allowed the president to veto specific aspects of bills passed by Congress while signing into law what remained
an office within the Executive Office of the President charged with producing the president’s budget, overseeing its implementation, and overseeing the executive bureaucracy
a spike in presidential popularity during international crises
literally a “friend of the court” and used for a brief filed by someone who is interested in but not party to a case
a court that reviews cases already decided by a lower or trial court and that may change the lower court’s decision
the power of a court to hear a case on appeal from a lower court and possibly change the lower court’s decision
a member of the Supreme Court who is not the chief justice
a written legal argument presented to a court by one of the parties in a case
the highest-ranking justice on the Supreme Court
the appeals (appellate) courts of the federal court system that review decisions of the lower (district) courts; also called courts of appeals
a non-criminal law defining private rights and remedies
the pattern of law developed by judges through case decisions largely based on precedent
an opinion written by a justice who agrees with the Court’s majority opinion but has different reasons for doing so
closed meeting of the justices to discuss cases on the docket and take an initial vote
the appellate courts of the federal court system that review decisions of the lower (district) courts; also called circuit courts
a law that prohibits actions that could harm or endanger others, and establishes punishment for those actions
an opinion written by a justice who disagrees with the majority opinion of the Court
the trial courts of the federal court system where cases are tried, evidence is presented, and witness testimony is heard
the list of cases pending on a court’s calendar
the division of the courts into two separate systems, one federal and one state, with each of the fifty states having its own courts
a judicial philosophy in which a justice is more likely to overturn decisions or rule actions by the other branches unconstitutional, especially in an attempt to broaden individual rights and liberties
a judicial philosophy in which a justice is more likely to let stand the decisions or actions of the other branches of government
an opinion of the Court with which more than half the nine justices agree
the 1803 Supreme Court case that established the courts’ power of judicial review and the first time the Supreme Court ruled an act of Congress to be unconstitutional
words spoken before the Supreme Court (usually by lawyers) explaining the legal reasons behind their position in a case and why it should prevail
the power of a court to hear a case for the first time
the principles or guidelines established by courts in earlier cases that frame the ongoing operation of the courts, steering the direction of the entire system
a Supreme Court custom in which a case will be heard when four justices decide to do so
an unwritten custom by which the president consults the senators in the state before nominating a candidate for a federal vacancy there, particularly for court positions
the lawyer who represents the federal government and argues some cases before the Supreme Court
the principle by which courts rely on past decisions and their precedents when making decisions in new cases
the level of court in which a case starts or is first tried
an order of the Supreme Court calling up the records of the lower court so a case may be reviewed; sometimes abbreviated cert.