AP GOVERNMENT KEY TERMS Unit 4: POLITICAL PARTIES/INTEREST GROUPS/MASS MEDIA 1. Amicus curiae brief: Latin for friend of the court it is a brief

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AP GOVERNMENT KEY TERMS Unit 4: POLITICAL PARTIES/INTEREST GROUPS/MASS MEDIA 1. Amicus curiae brief: Latin for friend of the court it is a brief filed by an interest group or interested party to influence a Supreme Court decision 2. Caucus: A meeting for selecting delegates to the national party convention in places such as a church, school, or auditorium 3. Closed primary: A primary in which only registered members of a particular political party can vote 4. Coattail effect: The popular influence of a presidential candidate on the election of congressional candidates of the same party 5. Dealignment: People turning away from the major political parties 6. Elite theory: Theory that upper class elites exercise great influence over public policy 7. Factions: Term used by Madison in Federalist #10 to denote what we now call interest groups 8. Front loading: Scheduling presidential primary elections early (e.g., February or March) in an election year 9. Grassroots mobilization: Influencing government decision makers though indirect pressure (usually in the form of letters, emails, phone calls) from large numbers of constituents 10. Hard money: Campaign contributions donated directly to candidates called hard since it is hard to raise 11. Incumbent: An officeholder who is seeking reelection 12. Independent expenditures: Spending by political action committees, corporations, or labor unions that is done to help a party or candidate, but is done independently of them 13. Iron triangle: An informal association of a bureaucratic agency, congressional committee, and an interest group that is said to have heavy influence over policy making 14. Issue advocacy ads: Ads that focus on issues and do not explicitly encourage citizens to vote for a certain candidate 15. Lobbying: A communication by someone other than a citizen acting on his or her own behalf, directed to a governmental decision maker with the hope of influencing his or her decision 16. Open primary: A primary in which voters can vote for the candidates of either the Democratic or the Republican party 17. Party platform: A list of positions and programs that the party adopts at the national convention. Each position is called a plank 18. Party polarization: An increase in divisions across ideological and party lines.e.g., Democrats and Republicans unwilling to compromise 19. Pluralism: Theory that policy making is the result of interest group competition 20. Political Action Committee (PAC): The political arm of an interest group that is legally entitled to raise money in order to contribute funds to candidates or political parties 21. Realigning ( critical ) election: Periods where a sharp and lasting shift occurs in the popular coalition supporting one or both parties. Happens when the issues that divide two parties change, thus the voters in each party change 22. Soft money: Money raised in unlimited amounts by political parties for party building purposes. Now largely illegal except for limited contributions to state or local parties for voter registration and get-out-the-vote efforts 23. Superdelegate: A delegate to the Democratic or Republican national convention who is there by virtue of being a current or former elected official 24. SuperPACs: Groups that can raise unlimited sums from corporations, unions, other groups, and individuals. They may not coordinate their activities with campaigns or candidates and have to report from where they get their donations 25. Swing state: A state that does not consistently vote either Democratic or Republican in presidential elections

UNIT 4: LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS MAIN TOPICS POLITICAL PARTIES ELECTIONS & CAMPAIGNS INTEREST GROUPS MASS MEDIA 60

POLITICAL PARTIES 61

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS POLITICAL PARTIES LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS ITEM POLITICAL PARTIES ELECTIONS INTEREST GROUPS MASS MEDIA DESCRIPTION OF LINKAGE A group which tries to win elections so they can control the government. A process in which one person is selected for a governmental job. They should represent their constituents. - Use propaganda to influence society - Use PACs to influence elections -Hire lobbyists to influence Congress Gains people s attention by selecting which stories to cover. - This entire unit covers Linkage Institutions: Connect or link people with the government. POLITICAL SCIENTISTS DESCRIBE POLITICAL PARTIES PORTION OF PARTY GOVERNMENTAL PARTY ORGANIZATIONAL PARTY PARTY IN THE ELECTORATE DESCRIPTION The office holders who organize themselves and pursue policy objectives under a party label. The workers and activists who make up the party s formal organization structure. The voters who consider themselves allied or associated with the party. 62

TYPES OF REALIGNMENT AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS POLITICAL PARTIES TERM DEFINITION EXAMPLE PARTY REALIGNMENT SECULAR REALIGNMENT A shifting of party coalition groupings in the electorate that remains in place for several elections. The gradual rearrangement of party coalitions, based more on demographic shifts than on shocks to the political system. - Jefferson forms Anti- Federalist to respond against Federalists strong central government - Whig party dissolved over slavery and Republicans gained strength to win presidency of 1860. - Democrats gain former Republicans during the New Deal legislation aimed to end Depression of 1930 s). Southern Democrats transformed into Republicans as the Democratic party shifted its platform toward liberal social causes. - Critical election: An election that signals a party realignment through voter polarization around new issues. (One or two of them generally precede a major realignment (or party realignment) - Secular realignment can take place because one generation is dying off and younger voters which replace them are different. - Dealignment: A general decline in party identification and loyalty in the electorate (similar sounding word, but different) POLITICAL PARTIES CHANGE OVER TIME 1789-1800 1800-1824 1824-1860 1860-1896 1896-1932 1932- PRESENT Federalists won ratification of the Constitution and the presidency for the first three terms. Federalists maintained beliefs in a loose interpretation of the Constitution to strengthen the nation. Democrats (Jacksonians) encouraged greater participation in politics and gained Southern and Western following. Democrats became the second- place party, aligned with the South and the wage earners and sent only Grover Cleveland to the White House. Democrats join with Populists to represent the Southern and Midwestern farmers, workers, and Protestant reformers. Democrats, starting with the New Deal, have pushed for affirmative action, strong protection of civil liberties, and government intervention on the economy. Anti- Federalists opposed strong national government and favored states rights and civil liberties. Democratic- Republicans (Jeffersonians) (AKA: Republicans) put less emphasis on a strong Union and more on states rights. Whigs were a loose band of eastern capitalists, bankers, and merchants who wanted internal improvements and stronger national government. Republicans freed the slaves, reconstructed the Union, and aligned with industrial interests. Republicans continue to dominate after a realignment based on economic factors. Republicans have taken on a laissez- faire approach to economic regulation and a brand of conservatism that reflects limited government. - Some people notice that states rights and Republicans are often in the right column so the right column must be conservative. Unfortunately it is not that simple. Republicans in the 1860s would actually seem more liberal than the Democrats of that time. By today s standards liberals would care more about expanding the role or influence of government and conservatives would want to lessen the role government plays. 63

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS POLITICAL PARTIES FUNCTIONS OF POLITICAL PARTIES FUNCTION DESCRIPTION I N E L E C T I O N S I N O F F I C E RECRUIT & LABEL CANDIDATES BUILDING COALITIONS GATHER FUNDS GET INFORMATION OUT POLICY FORMATION & PROMOTION (AKA: GOVERNING OR RUNNING THE GOVERNMENT) OPPOSE OTHER PARTY (AKA: WATCHDOG) Parties search for candidates, nominate them, and help to define their viewpoints. Parties try to build coalitions of like- minded citizens. Parties raise hundreds of millions of dollars for the campaigns. Mailings, social media platforms, and other forms of communication can build support. Political parties play a major role in running the government. Legislatures at national and state level are organized along party lines. Most political appointments in the federal executive and judicial branches are made along party lines. No party is in control of all levels of government. Parties are the loyal opposition, trying to force compromises. TWO PARTY SYSTEM & MINOR PARTIES TYPE OF ELECTION DESCRIPTION SYSTEM EFFECT ON PARTIES PROPORTIONAL REPRESENTATION A voting system that apportions legislative seats according to the percentage of the vote won by a particular political party. Multi- party system Minor parties are more successful in this system. This allows interests to be divided into more groupings. SINGLE- MEMBER DISTRICTS (AKA:WINNER- TAKE- ALL SYSTEM A system in which the party that receives at least one more vote than any other party wins the election. Two- party system Minor parties do not generally do well. This encourages the grouping of interests into as few parties as possible. - The United States does not have proportional representation. It has a winner- take- all system so third parties are not as successful. Some countries do utilize a proportional representation system. They have a multi- party system as opposed to the United States two party system. - Minor Party: (often called 3rd parties) A political party that plays a much smaller role than a major party in a country s politics and elections. 64

INFLUENCE OF MINOR PARTIES ITEM AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS POLITICAL PARTIES DESCRIPTIONS & EXAMPLES THEY SOMETIMES TURN INTO MAJOR PARTIES - Jacksonian Democrats were at first a minor party. - Lincoln's Republicans were at first a minor party. -Although no minor party has won the White House since 1860, they have sent members to Congress. 4 TYPES OF MINOR PARTIES SINGLE ISSUE PARTIES SPLINTER PARTIES ECONOMIC PROTEST PARTIES IDEOLOGICAL PARTIES Created to advance a particular policy or to solve one particular political concern. (Examples: Free Soil Party wanted to end slavery. The American Party wanted to tighten restrictions on immigration and citizenship) Break off from a larger existing party due to an ideology differing from that of party leaders. (Example: Dixiecrats in 1948 with Strom Thurmond) They are created due to concern with economic conditions. (Example: In 1892, the Populists focused on issues that farmers faced) Created to follow a prescribed ideology and have a comprehensive view of government and policy that differs greatly from that of the two major parties. (Example: The Socialist Party took on child labor, minimum wage, and foreign policy issues. The Socialist Party could also be viewed as an economic protest party) BIGGEST INFLUENCE Major parties sometimes adopt ideas from minor parties. - Another historical minor party is the Progressive Party/Bull Moose Party of Theodore Roosevelt that didn t like the Republican leadership (after Teddy had been president for 8 years) handling of trust busting (when government breaks up corporate trusts and monopolies) and environmental conservation. Teddy Roosevelt did better than Taft but it split the Republican- conservative vote allowing Woodrow Wilson (Democrat) to be elected. - Modern Minor Party Presidential Candidates: Pat Buchanan ran with Reform Party in 2000. Ralph Nader, consumer advocate, ran with the Green Party in 1996 and 2000. - To get a candidate's name printed on the ballot they must meet certain qualifications in each state. Most states require a fee and a large amount of signatures. - Minor parties have a tougher time raising money and getting on ballots than major parties. Major parties are fearful they will split their votes and do not want them on ballots. 65

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS POLITICAL PARTIES PARTY ORGANIZATION ITEM DESCRIPTION TYPE EXAMPLE PURPOSE NATIONAL COMMITTEE Democratic National Committee (DNC) Republican National Committee (RNC) The DNC and the RNC focus on aiding presidential campaigns and conducting general party- building activities NATIONAL COMMITTEES PARTY COMMITTEES IN CONGRESS (AKA: HILL COMMITTEES) National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) National Republican Congressional Committee (NRCC) Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) The Hill Committees work primarily to maximize the number of seats held by their respective parties in Congress. Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) LEADERSHIP The party chairperson (or national chair) is the chief strategist and spokesperson. This person is not usually as famous as the President or congressional leader but they run the party machinery (building up the membership, seek funding, recruiting quality candidates, conveying to voters the party philosophy). Each party elects its own chairperson by a vote of the committee. (So both the DNC and RNC has a chairperson) PARTICIPANTS WHEN THEY MEET WHAT THEY DO NATIONAL CONVENTIONS Delegates from all 50 States (& U.S. territories) Every 4 years 1)Create platform: (A list of principles and plans that they wish to enact) 2)Nominate Candidates: (Give official party endorsement for president and vice president) STATE & LOCALITIES Every state has a statewide party organization. The state party chairperson makes public appearances on local television and works to recruit new member and register voters. Some have salaries and offices. State and local organizations can operate independently of the national committee. INFORMAL GROUPS Interest groups and associations that often provide money, labor, or other forms of assistance to the parties. Think tanks (institutional collections of policy- oriented researchers and academics) also unofficially influence party positions. 66

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS POLITICAL PARTIES POLITICAL PARTIES IN GOVERNMENT BRANCH OR LAYER OF GOVERNMENT DESCRIPTION CONGRESS PRESIDENCY JUDICIARY STATE GOVERNMENTS Prior to the beginning of every session, the parties in both houses of Congress gather (or caucus) separately to select party leaders and to arrange for the appointment of members of each chamber s committees. Leaders in Congress often attempt to influence members to vote according to party lines. Presidents need support in Congress to pass legislation. In exchange for congressional support the President often appoints many activists to office. Presidents recruit candidates, help raise money for the party treasury, and campaign extensively for party nominees during election seasons. Judges are creatures of the political process. Judges are often seen as liberal or conservative. Democrats like to appoint liberal judges and Republicans like to appoint conservative judges. - The political party influences the legislative, executive, and judicial branches at the state level as well. - Governors have more influence in their state than Presidents on political parties because they have more jobs to hand out. - State legislative leaders also have more power, thus party unity is usually higher in the state capitols. RECENT MAJOR PARTY SUPPORTERS CATEGORY DEMOCRATS REPUBLICANS REGION Northeast States West Coast Southern States Great Plain States Mountain States GENDER Women Men ANCESTRY RELIGION African Ancestry Hispanic Ancestry Catholic Jewish Nonreligious European Ancestry Protestants Evangelicals WEALTH Poor Wealthy URBAN/RURAL Urban Rural Suburbs 67

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS POLITICAL PARTIES RECENT MAJOR PARTY PLATFORMS POLITICAL PARTY 2012 PLATFORM DEMOCRATS HEALTH CARE FOR THE POOR EQUAL RIGHTS FOR WOMEN EQUALITY AND SEXUAL ORIENTATION IMMIGRATION CLIMATE CHANGE ABORTION Strengthen Medicaid and oppose efforts to block funding Ensure full equality and support Equal Rights Amendment All Americans deserve the same chance to pursue happiness regardless of sexual orientation Enact comprehensive reform that values our laws and a nation of immigrants Affirms the science of climate change and need smart policies that lead to clean energy Supports Roe v. Wade and a woman s right to make decisions regarding her pregnancy REPUBLICANS GOVERNMENT- FUNDED SUPPORT DEATH PENALTY MARRIAGE IMMIGRATION GUN CONTROL ABORTION Stand in contrast to current administration's policies that expand entitlements, create new public programs, and provide expensive government bailouts Courts should have the option of imposing the death penalty in capital murder cases Marriage should be one man and one woman and this must be upheld as the national standard Oppose any form of amnesty of those that intentionally violated the law Pass laws consistent with Supreme Court decisions which have upheld the fundamental right to keep and bear arms for self- defense Oppose using public revenues to promote or perform abortions or fund organizations which perform or advocate it Platform: a list of principles and plans a political party hopes to enact. It is the best way to determine a party s primary ideology. Political Parties write a platform at every National Convention (when they also officially nominate the presidential and vice presidential candidate). 68

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS POLITICAL PARTIES MAJOR POLITICAL PARTIES & THE MEDIA PARTY MASCOT TYPES OF PEOPLE NEWS OUTLETS LEANING THEIR WAY DEMOCRATS Donkey African Americans Pacifists Environmentalists Feminists Latinos Members of organized labor Washington Post The Nation New Republic CNN Air America Radio REPUBLICANS (AKA: GRAND OLD PARTY, GOP) Elephant Neo- conservatives Business interests Wall Street and financial interests Supply- side conservatives Religious conservatives Southern conservatives Mountain states conservatives (more libertarian) Washington Times National Review The Wall Street Journal Fox News Rush Limbaugh Republicans are the elephants. Democrats are the donkeys. Both mascots started out as satire to make fun of the political parties in the 1800 s. Both parties embrace their mascots today. PARTY IDENTIFICATION & DEALIGNMENT ITEM PARTY IDENTIFICATION DEALIGNMENT DESCRIPTION A citizen s personal affinity for a political party, usually expressed by a tendency to vote for the candidates for that party. A general decline in party identification and loyalty in the electorate. - Party membership is optional. People can change it whenever they want. - Some people like to call themselves independent even though they always vote for the same political party to win. - Lately about 40% of the American public have been identifying themselves as independent. The two major parties go up and down but both of them can usually claim near 30%. - Party Identification is still the most accurate indicator of how an individual will vote. 69

ELECTIONS & CAMPAIGNS 70

TYPES OF ELECTIONS TYPE OF ELECTION ELECTIONS & CAMPAIGNS SPECIFIC TYPE DESCRIPTION PRIMARY ELECTIONS GENERAL ELECTIONS OTHER STATE ELECTIONS PRIMARY ELECTION CLOSED PRIMARY OPEN PRIMARY RUNOFF PRIMARY GENERAL ELECTION BALLOT MEASURE INITIATIVE REFERENDUM RECALL Election in which voters decide which of the candidates within a party will represent the party in the general election. A primary election in which only a party s registered voters are eligible to vote. A primary in which party members, independents, and sometimes members of the other party are allowed to vote. (Participation of voting when not affiliated it called crossover voting) (Raiding is an organized attempt to influence the primary results of the other party) A second primary election between the two candidates receiving the greatest number of votes in the first primary. Election in which voters decide which candidates will actually fill elective public offices. An election option such as initiative or referendum that enable voters to enact public policy. An election that allows citizens to propose legislation and submit it to the state electorate for popular vote. An election whereby the state legislature submits proposed legislation to the state s voters for approval. An election in which voters can remove an incumbent from office by popular vote. - These elections take place at national, state, and local levels. - Electorate: the citizen eligible to vote. At fixed intervals they vote to express opinions about issues and to judge those in power. - If we did not have peaceful transition of power that would only leave us with non-peaceful transitions. 71

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS ELECTIONS & CAMPAIGNS PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS: SUMMARY PHASE OF ELECTION WHAT TAKES PLACE WHAT THE CANDIDATES NEED NOMINATIONS NATIONAL CONVENTION GENERAL ELECTION Primaries & Caucuses are held in each State for both major parties to see which candidates the delegates will vote for their party s nomination. Both political parties hold a convention where the delegates officially nominate their party s candidate and they write the party s platform. On election day each state's popular vote determines how many electoral votes each candidates receives. At least 2,778 delegates for the Democratic nomination At least 1,144 delegates for the Republican nomination People in their party to come together and support them on during the general election. They need at least 270 electoral votes to become President. The next 3 charts go into greater detail regarding these three phases of presidential elections. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS: NOMINATIONS ITEM PRIMARIES CAUCUSES DESCRIPTION There are different kinds. People vote on ballot. Their vote is their secret. Participants spend several hours learning about politics and the party. There are speeches by candidates or representatives and receive advice from party leaders. People often go to corners of a room to show support (if your candidate has low support you have a chance to go to your next choice) - The political party determines how many delegates each state possesses. The primary elections and caucus votes determine which candidates the delegates support. Once a candidate receives a majority of delegates they have earned the party nomination. - Number of delegates per state are determined by the party (but they base it on population) - States determine the date of their own primaries (often referring to both primaries and caucuses, AKA: primary season - Frontloading: The tendency of states to choose an early date on the primary calendar. (States do this so the candidates will come to their state and so their citizens can vote before a candidate receives a majority of delegates). Frontloading gives an advantage to early leaders because it gives less time for opponents to tear them down. 72

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS ELECTIONS & CAMPAIGNS PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS: NATIONAL CONVENTION ITEM DESCRIPTION WHO HAS THEM? WHEN ARE THEY? WHO GOES? WHAT DO THESE DELEGATES DO? Both Democrats and Republicans have their own national conventions. They take place every four years (the summer before a presidential election). Delegates selected at local and state level to represent the people from their state. - Officially nominate the presidential and vice presidential candidates (as a team). - Write the party platform. - Some delegates do not legally have to support the person their state voted for. Some legally do. Most delegates do select their state's choice. A couple go against the grain from time to time. - Superdelegates: A delegate slot to a party s national convention that is reserved for an elected party official. - National conventions are where the political party needs to come together (unify the party). Parties spend a year tearing themselves apart in the nomination process. Now they need to stand together to take on the opposition. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS: THE GENERAL ELECTION ITEM ELECTORAL COLLEGE ELECTOR WINNING THE PRESIDENCY ELECTORAL VOTES PER STATE WINNER- TAKE- ALL (SINGLE- MEMBER DISTRICT) (PLURALITY) DESCRIPTION Representatives of each state who cast the final ballots that actually elect a president. Member of the Electoral College chosen by methods determined in each state. The winner must receive 270 electoral votes of the 538 possible. (If no candidate receives at least 270 electoral votes then the House of Representatives selects the President and the Senate selects the Vice President) Each state has the same number electoral votes as the representation they have in Congress. (Example: Illinois has 18 House of Representatives + 2 Senators = 20 Electoral Votes) In 48 states, whichever candidate receives the majority of the votes (popular vote) wins all the electoral votes from that state. (Under this system it is possible to win the electoral college while losing the popular vote. Nebraska and Maine both have a proportional disbursement of electoral votes based on how the population of their states voted). - Least amount of elector votes a state can have is 3. California has the most with 55.. Washington D.C. has 3. (23rd amendment). - Some people want a popular vote to determine the presidency instead, because in 1824 John Quincy Adams, 1876 Rutherford Hayes, 1888 Benjamin Harrison, and 2000 George W. Bush won the presidency without winning the popular vote. 73

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS ELECTIONS & CAMPAIGNS CONGRESSIONAL CAMPAIGNS ITEM DESCRIPTION MODERN CAMPAIGNS MIDTERM ELECTIONS FUNDRAISING FINDING OUT WHAT THE PUBLIC WANTS GETTING MESSAGE OUT TO VOTERS To compete for a seat in the House of Representatives and the Senate, a candidate must create a networked organization that resembles a small corporation, spend much of his or her own money, solicit hundreds of donors for contributions, and sacrifice many hours and days to the process. All House candidates and ⅓ of Senate candidates run for election every two years. Federal elections that take place halfway through a president s term are called midterm elections. - The size of a candidate's war chest, or bank account for campaigning can play a role in determining victory or loss. (Half of all House candidates raise more than $1 million dollars, which would require them fundraising $16,000 a week) (Senate candidates spend on average 12 million) - Candidates generally spend ¼ of their campaign time making personal phone calls and holding formal fundraisers (cocktail parties, picnics, and formal dinners with celebrities and officials has guest speakers). A typical campaign spends 3 percent of its revenue on polling and surveys to understand what voters think. They also use focus groups, internet blogs, radio call- in shows, and conversations with party leaders & political analysts to find out what the public wants. - The candidate gets their message out (common themes of decency, loyalty, and hard work). The three phases a campaign include: the biography, the issues, and the attack. - ¾ of all voters say they get most of their information about elections by watching television. A visual is a short news segment showing the candidate in action (costs the candidate nothing to show). A spot is a short expensive commercial. - Redistricting: The process of redrawing congressional districts to reflect increases or decreases in seats allotted to the states. This effects how many seats each state gets in the House of Representatives. The census counts the population every 10 years. If a state is to gain or lose seats in the House it is up to the State legislatures to draw the congressional districts for their state. Gerrymandering: the drawing of boundaries in a way to produce a particular electoral outcome without regard to the shape of the district. 74

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS ELECTIONS & CAMPAIGNS INCUMBENCY ADVANTAGES & DISADVANTAGES ITEM SPECIFIC ITEM DESCRIPTION ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES Name Recognition Money Presence Coattail Effect Role of Economy People often know their members by name. This is partly due to the franking privilege in which free mailing is available so Congress members can inform constituents about new things going on in their states and districts. Some members become household names being re- elected over and over again. Incumbents nearly always have more money than challengers. Political action committees (PAC s) donate heavily to incumbents. Officeholders can provide services to constituents, including answer questions about issues of concern to voters. Incumbents keep offices in their hometowns and in Washington D.C. Congressional candidates can often ride on the popularity of their party s presidential candidate. The single greatest predictor of an incumbent's loss is a poor economy. When times are tough the voting public will often hold incumbents and their party responsible. Incumbent: the office holder who is seeking re- election. 75

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS ELECTIONS & CAMPAIGNS A CAMPAIGN S KEY PLAYERS PLAYERS DESCRIPTIONS CANDIDATE VOLUNTEER CAMPAIGN STAFF A person chooses to run for office for a number of reasons which include personal ambition, the desire to promote a certain ideology and pursue specific public politics, or simply because they think they can do a better job than their opponents. Volunteers are the lifeblood of every national, state, and local campaign. Voter canvas: the process by which a campaign reaches individual voters, either by door- to- door solicitation or by telephone. Closer to election day volunteers begin vital get out the vote (GOTV) efforts, calling and e- mailing supports to remind them to vote and arranging their transportation if necessary. THE CANDIDATE S PROFESSIONAL STAFF THE CANDIDATE S HIRED GUNS Campaign Manager Finance Chair Pollster Direct Mailer Communications Director Press Secretary Internet Team Campaign Consultants Media Consultants The individual who travels with the candidate and coordinates the many different aspects of the campaign. A professional who coordinates the fund- raising efforts for the campaign. A professional who gives and analyzes public opinion surveys that guide political campaigns. A professional who supervises a political campaign's direct mail fund- raising strategies. The person who develops the overall media strategy for the candidate, blending free press coverage with paid TV and radio spots. The individual charged with interacting and communicating with journalists on a daily basis. The campaign staff that makes use of Web- based resources to communicate with voters, raise funds, organize volunteers, and plan campaign events. A private- sector professional who sells to a candidate the technologies, services, and strategies required to get that candidate elected. A professional who produces candidates television, radio, and print advertisements. 76

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS ELECTIONS & CAMPAIGNS CAMPAIGN MEDIA MEDIA TYPE DESCRIPTIONS Political advertisements purchased for a candidate s campaign. PAID MEDIA FREE MEDIA NEW MEDIA Types of Ads: Positive ads: Advertising on behalf of a candidate that stresses the candidate s qualifications, family, and issue positions, without reference to the opponent. Negative ads: advertising on behalf of a candidate that attacks the opponent s platform of character. Contrast ad: Ad that compares the records and proposals of the candidates, with a bias toward the sponsor. Spot ad: Television advertising on behalf of a candidate that is broadcast in sixty-,thirty-,or ten- second durations. Inoculation ad: Advertising that attempts to counteract an anticipated attack from the opposition before the attack is launched. Coverage of a candidate s campaign by the news media. New technologies, such as the Internet, that blur the line between paid and free media sources. Candidates want favorable coverage. Campaign teams use media consultants in an attempt to influence the media by 1) Staff members seek to isolate the candidate from the press 2) The campaign stages media events (sound bites: brief clever quotes with appealing backdrops so they will be covered on the news) 3) Spin any circumstance they can (make their candidate look good and the other look bad) 4) Circumvent the news by going on talk shows. THE FEDERAL ELECTIONS CAMPAIGN ACT (FECA) ITEM FEDERAL ELECTIONS COMMISSION (FEC) REGULATED MONEY POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEES PUBLIC FUND DESCRIPTION This law created an independent agency created to monitor and enforce campaign regulation. (6- member nonpartisan body) This law prevented donors from giving more than $1,000 to any federal candidate and more than $5,000 to a political committee. This law defined that Political Action Committees must: Must have at least 50 members. Must donate to at least five candidates. Must register with the FEC at least six months in advance of the election. This law created a voluntary public fund to assist viable presidential candidates. (When you file taxes you have a chance to give $3 bucks. Candidates use public funds to match individual donations of $250, if they spend less than 50K of their own money and raise 5k in at least 20 states) - This law was created in 1971 and amended in 1974 and 1976 in response to Americans distrust of money in politics and politics in general after the Watergate scandal. 77

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS ELECTIONS & CAMPAIGNS CAMPAIGN FINANCE ITEMS FEDERAL ELECTIONS COMMISSION DESCRIPTIO N The FEC is an extremely important independent agency that is responsible for regulating elections. Laws and court cases have also had great importance on this issue. HARD MONEY SOFT MONEY Donations given directly to a candidate for campaigning. Donations given to a political party for party- building purposes (Such as get out the vote drives or issue ads) (Soft money skyrocketed after FECA) McCAIN- FEINGOLD LAW (AKA: BIPARTISAN CAMPAIGN REFORM ACT OF 2002) (AKA: BCRA) Banned soft money contributions to the national parties Increased limits on hard money donations per election cycle: $2,000 from individuals (with an adjustment for inflation) $5,000 from PACs $25,000 from the national parties Prohibited corporations, trade associations, and labor organizations from paying for electioneering communications using campaign treasury money within 60 days of the general election and 30 days of a primary. Candidates must explicitly acknowledge approval of all TV ads. 527 POLITICAL COMMITTEES Non-profit and unregulated interest groups that focus on specific cause or policy positions and attempt to influence voters. They cannot directly engage in advocacy for or against a candidate. 501(C)(3) COMMITTEES Nonprofit and tax- exempt groups that can educate voters about issues and are not required to release the names of their contributors. Citizens United v. FEC (2010) Campaign spending by unions and corporations is a protected form of speech This case started SuperPACs. - Hatch Act, 1939: Federal employees and companies doing business under federal contracts were forbidden from contributing to elections. - Buckley v Valeo, 1976: Campaign spending is a form of political expression the 1 st Amendment protects. The Constitution forbids Congress from limiting individual political campaign expenditures. However Congress can regulate contributions to candidates and parties. - 527 committees and 501 (c ) (3) committees are named after tax code: They show that taking money out of politics is not going to be easy. 78

GOVERNING ELECTIONS LEVEL OF GOVERNMENT AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS ELECTIONS & CAMPAIGNS DESCRIPTION STATE Sets times and locations for elections. (Sets dates for non- federal elections) Chooses format of ballot and how to file for candidacy. Creates rules and procedures for voter registration. Draws congressional district lines (state legislatures). Certifies election results days after Election Day. NATIONAL (AKA: FEDERAL) Set date for federal elections: (Currently: Tuesday following the first Monday in November of even numbered years). Has judicial jurisdiction on election policy. Addresses suffrage in constitutional amendments Enforces relevant civil rights legislation. Administers and enforces campaign finance rules (FEC) 79

INTEREST GROUPS 80

INTEREST GROUPS TYPES OF INTEREST GROUPS TYPE OF GROUP DESCRIPTION ECONOMIC INTEREST GROUPS SOCIAL ACTION AND EQUALITY GROUPS PUBLIC INTEREST GROUPS GOVERNMENTAL UNITS POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEES (PACs) These organizations form to serve the economic interest of their members, such as labor groups. When a social change is desired, people may join together to help get this change made. Some organizations exist to work for their perception of the public s best interests. (Not just to benefit group members) State and local governments are becoming strong organized interests as they lobby the federal government or even charitable foundations for money for a vast array of state and local programs. (They want earmarks: monies targeted for programs within a state or congressional district to fund basic programs for roads schools, parks & waterways, or other public works projects) Federally regulated, officially registered fund- raising committee that represent interest groups in the political process. (Often made up of corporations, labor unions, and interest groups) - Interest Group: A group that tries to encourage or prevent change in public policy without being elected. (Political parties are different because they want to control the government by winning elections) - Other names interest groups go by: special interests, pressure groups, organized interests, nongovernmental organization (NGO s), political groups, lobby groups, and public interest groups. -- Interest groups connect citizens to the government by increasing public awareness about issues and helping frame the public agenda. - Do the rich and powerful have greater influence? More than they deserve? INTEREST GROUP THEORIES THEORY PLURALIST THEORY DISTURBANCE THEORY TRANSACTIONS THEORY POPULATION ECOLOGY THEORY DESCRIPTION The theory that political power is distributed among a wide array of diverse and competing interest groups. The theory that interest groups form in part to counteract the efforts of other groups. The theory that public policies are the result of narrowly defined exchanges among political actors. The theory that the life of a political organization is conditional on the density and diversity of the interest group population in a given area. 81

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS INTEREST GROUPS FUNCTIONS OF INTEREST GROUPS FUNCTION SPECIFIC FUNCTION DESCRIPTION LOBBYING ELECTIONEERING LOBBYING CONGRESS LOBBYING THE EXECUTIVE BRANCH LOBBYING THE COURTS GRASSROOTS LOBBYING PROTESTS AND RADICAL ACTIVISM CANDIDATE RECRUITMENT AND ENDORSEMENTS GETTING OUT THE VOTE RATING THE CANDIDATES OR OFFICE HOLDERS POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEES (PACs) Lobbying activities include congressional testimony on behalf of a group (even writing bills), individual letters from interested constituents, and campaign contributions (straight up vote buying is illegal) Groups target the president, White House staff, and numerous levels of bureaucracy to influence policy decisions at the formation and implementation stages. - Direct sponsorship of litigation, paying so their group can sue someone using a test case. (Example: NAACP paid for lawyers to take the Brown case all the way to the Supreme Court to fight against segregation in the American schools) - Amicus curiae briefs: Written to inform justices of the group s policy preference, generally offered in the guise of legal arguments. Interest group activity that encourages people to contact their congressional representatives directly in an effort to affect policy. This is occasionally used by some interest groups. Like the Boston Tea Party. Or when marchers risk detention or jail to protest the International Monetary Fund. Some interest groups recruit, endorse, and/or provide financial or other forms of support for political candidates. Launch GOTV to increase voting expecting these voters will vote in favor of the group s policy preferences. Liberal and conservative interest groups rate members of Congress so the public can hold members accountable. Interest groups use these to raise and spend money on campaigns. - Lobbying: the process by which interest groups attempt to assert their influence on the policy- making process. Interest groups are large organizations that hire people to apply pressure at all aspects involving policy. Lobbyists are experts in their fields with scientific data to back up their claims, so when they testify to Congress and write legislation it is very persuasive. - Electioneering: To actively take part in the activities of an election campaign. 82

SUCCESSFUL INTEREST GROUPS ITEMS AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS INTEREST GROUPS DESCRIPTIONS DIFFERENT MEASUREMENTS FACTORS THAT OFTEN CONTRIBUTE TO SUCCESS - The group s ability to get its issues on the public agenda. - Winning key pieces of legislation Congress. - Successful implementation of laws - Winning key lawsuits in court. - Backing successful candidates. - Leaders: Must be inspiring, persuasive, and attract new members. -Patrons & Funding: Providing start-up funds to pay for advertising, litigating, and lobbying. - Committed members: Leaders at top, then workers, then due paying members (that do not do much else). All groups provide some collective good: something of value like money, a tax write- off, a good feeling, or a better environment that cannot be withheld from a nonmember. - Free rider problem: Potential members fail to join a group because they can get the benefit, or collective good, sought by the group without contributing the effort. REGULATING LOBBYISTS ITEM UNREGULATED PERIOD THE FEDERAL REGULATION OF LOBBYING ACT (1946) THE LOBBYING DISCLOSURE ACT OF 1995 DESCRIPTION For the first 150 years of our nation s history, federal lobbying practices went unregulated. This required anyone hired to lobby any member of Congress to register and file quarterly financial reports. For years very few lobbyists actually filed any reports. Defined a lobbyist as anyone who devotes at least 20 percent of a client s or employer s time to lobbying activities. Also it required: 1) Register with the Clerk of the House and the Secretary of the Senate 2) Report their clients and issues and the agency or house they lobbied 3) Estimate the amount they are paid by each client (By 2005 32,890 lobbyists were registered and they spend $4 million on lobby both chambers) HONEST LEADERSHIP AND OPEN GOVERNMENT ACT OF - Ban on gifts - -Tougher disclosure requirements - Longer time limits on moving from federal government to the 2007 private lobbying sector. 83

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS INTEREST GROUPS MAJOR INTEREST GROUPS (ALSO REGISTERED AS LOBBIES) INTEREST GROUP AMERICAN ASSOCIATION OF RETIRED PERSONS (AARP) AMERICAN BAR ASSOCIATION (ABA) AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION (ACLU) AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR- CONGRESS OF INDUSTRIAL ORGANIZATIONS (AFL- CIO) HERITAGE FOUNDATION LEAGUE OF UNITED LATIN AMERICAN CITIZENS (LULAC) MOTHERS AGAINST DRUNK DRIVING (MADD) THE NATIONAL ASSOCIATION FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF COLORED PEOPLE (NAACP) NATIONAL RIFLE ASSOCIATION (NRA) NATIONAL RIGHT TO LIFE COMMITTEE NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN (NOW) PEOPLE FOR THE ETHICAL TREATMENT OF ANIMALS (PETA) PLANNED PARENTHOOD SIERRA CLUB U.S. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE DESCRIPTION Citizens over 50 with influences on issues like Social Security and prescription drugs Represents the legal community Legal experts focusing on civil rights and civil liberties Headed labor movement and workers rights causes for decades Lobby in favor of reducing the federal bureaucracy (less govt.) Defends the civil rights of Hispanic citizens Influences changes in state law concerning penalties for driving under the influence of alcohol Advocates for African American civil rights Focuses on 2nd amendment rights (anti- big government) Seeks to make abortion illegal Supports women s rights Advocates for animal rights Advocates pro-choice legislation, comprehensive sex education and low cost health care Environmental group focused on conservation issues and maintaining clean air and water standards Represents the business community all across the nation 84

MASS MEDIA 85

TYPES OF MEDIA MEDIA TYPE AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS MASS MEDIA DESCRIPTION PRINT MEDIA RADIO NEWS (BROADCAST MEDIA) TELEVISION NEWS (BROADCAST MEDIA) INTERNET (THE NEW MEDIA) - Local Newspapers (Ex: Chicago Tribune) & National Magazines (Ex: Time Magazine) - Yellow journalism: newspaper publishing (late 19th century) featured sensationalized and oversimplified news coverage. - Muckraking: (early 20th century) journalism concerned with reforming government and business conduct. FDR use to inform Americans directly with fireside chats. Invention of television made it less popular. 12% of Americans reported getting their news from talk radio in 1997. By 2005 it was up to 22% of Americans. This media is currently used much more by conservatives. Most homes had televisions by the 1960 s. In 2007, 65% of Americans claimed to get their news from television whereas only 27% read newspapers. C- SPAN AND C- SPAN 2 cover Congress. Nightly and weekly news programs inform viewers on events. Saturday Night Live and the Daily Show entertain and inform viewers. In 2007, 29% of American claimed to receive news from the Internet which was up from 9% in 2000. (Examples: blogs, news websites, and social media) - Mass media: the entire array of organizations through which information is collected and disseminated to the general public. FUNCTIONS OF THE MEDIA FUNCTION GATEKEEPER SCOREKEEPER WATCHDOG SHORT DESCRIPTION DECIDING WHAT MAKES THE NEWS REPORTING SUCCESSES & FAILURES REPORT SCANDALS & CORRUPTION LONG DESCRIPTION Producers, anchors, editors, and writers set the news agenda. They have to decide what is newsworthy. There is not enough air time or space to give to all the news that happened. They have to pick and choose. If the American people are aware of something the government is more likely to get involved. The media tracks political successes and failures. During campaign season they update their readers and viewers on the success of the competing candidates (AKA: horse race journalism). Scorekeeping does continue onward after the election is over by judging and reporting on opinion polls of sitting presidents. Reporters look for corruption, scandal, or inefficiency. The media has an obligation to report American abuses and mistakes of its officials. 86

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS MASS MEDIA MEDIA INFLUENCE POSSIBLE EFFECTS IGNORANT PEOPLE EXOTIC TOPICS AGENDA SETTING FRAMING INDIRECT DESCRIPTION Reporting can sway those who are uncommitted and do not have a strong opinion in the first place. The media is likely to have a greater impact on topics far removed from the lives and experiences of readers and viewers. News organizations can influence what we think about, even if they cannot determine what we think. The process by which a news organization defines a political issue and consequently affects opinion on the issue. (Example: A Ku Klux Klan story could be framed as a civil rights story exercising the freedom of speech, or it could be framed as a law and order story in which they were disturbing the peace. Both stories would be interpreted very differently by the audience) The media has the power to indirectly influence the way the public views politicians and government. (Example: Presidential elections are often related to the voters assessment of the economy. So if the news chose not to highlight the bad economy for awhile the sitting president might do better) Media effects: The influence of news sources on public opinion. GOVERNMENT S RELATIONSHIP WITH THE MEDIA BRANCH OF GOVERNMENT PRESIDENTS (EXECUTIVE BRANCH) CONGRESS (LEGISLATIVE BRANCH) COURTS (JUDICIAL BRANCH) DESCRIPTION - Bully pulpit: A stage from which a president can persuade the public who then would persuade Congress. - Press Secretaries hold (almost daily) press conferences in which they have rehearsed answers to likely questions. - This briefing room has 60 reporters to cover the president daily and another 2,000 have White House press credentials. The president's communication team can alter or revoke press credentials or seating assignments to discipline hostile reporters. - Roll Call and The Hill are two notable papers that cover Congress. - In the late 1970 s, C- SPAN (Cable- Satellite Public Affairs Network) which is a privately funded, nonprofit public service. (C- SPAN 2 came in 1986 to cover Senate at same time). Cameras are generally not allowed in federal court, which is why we see drawings of people on the stand on the news. There are reporters covering these stories and they do go into court to view the proceedings. They are often seen reporting from outside the courthouse. 87

AP AMERICAN GOVERNMENT STUDY GUIDE LINKAGE INSTITUTIONS MASS MEDIA FREEDOM OF PRESS ITEM PRIOR RESTRAINT ANONYMOUS SOURCES LIBEL & SLANDER REGULATING AIRWAVES CORPORATE VS. PUBLIC MEDIA DESCRIPTION In New York Times v. United States (1971) the Supreme Court assured that the claim of national security does not justify censorship in advance and that the government does not have the power of prior restraint. In Branzburg v. Hayes (1972) the Supreme Court ruled that knowledge a reporter collects is everyman s evidence and cannot be legally withheld. Some states have created shield laws to protect journalists from this, but federally there is not law. If a publication or broadcast lies about an individual and defames them that individual has the right to sue the publication or reporter. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulates electronic media. It currently commissions licenses to stations, assures equal time to political candidates, balanced coverage of controversial issues, facilitates non-commercial public broadcasts, prevents rigged game shows, and assures decency on radio and television. - In the late 1960 s Congress passed the Corporation for Public Broadcasting Act which created the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) to develop non-commercial television and radio. It subsidizes a TV Network, Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) and a radio network, National Public Radio (NPR). - In 1996, The Telecommunications Act deregulated ownership and allowed large corporations to purchase more media outlets. The First Amendment allows for the freedom of the press. Anyone can print anything, but the government can punish the publishing of improper, mischievous, or illegal material. MEDIA BIAS BIAS IN FAVOR OF LIBERALS Network Evening News PBS NewsHour CNN MSNBC BIAS IN FAVOR OR CONSERVATIVES Fox News Majority of talk radio shows There is a lot of data about negative reporting on candidate coverage. There are definitely biases in the media. In the 2008 presidential election only 9% of the stories examined issue positions and candidate qualifications. 88

Unit 4: Political Parties, Interest Groups, and Mass Media (2004 Q 3) Minor parties (third parties) have been a common feature of United States politics. a. Describe the point of view expressed about minor parties in the political cartoon. b. Identify and explain how two rules of the United States electoral system act as obstacles to minor-party candidates winning elections. c. Minor parties make important contributions to the United States political system in spite of the institutional obstacles to their candidates success. Describe two of these contributions. http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/members/repository/ap04_sg_gopo_us_37090.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap04_gopous_q3_38680.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap04_comm_gopo_us_38473.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/_ap04_qa_gopo_us_38543.pdf

(2005 Q 4) The United States Congress has debated a variety of campaign finance reforms over the last decade. The proposals debated have included the following: a. Eliminating soft money b. Limiting independent expenditures c. Raising limits on individual contributions i. Select one of the listed proposals and do all of the following: Define the proposal. Describe an argument that proponents make in favor of the proposal. Describe an argument that opponents make against the proposal. ii. Select a different listed proposal and do all of the following: Define the proposal. Describe an argument that proponents make in favor of the proposal. Describe an argument that opponents make against the proposal. http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/members/repository/_ap05_sg_gopo_us_46636.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap_usgovandpol_apcent_47328.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/members/repository/_ap05_comm_gopo_us_47180.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/_ap_qa05_gopo_us_47367.pdf

(2006 Q 1) While interest groups and political parties each play a significant role in the United States political system, they differ in their fundamental goals. a. Identify the fundamental goal of interest groups in the political process. b. Identify the fundamental goal of major political parties in the political process. c. Describe two different ways by which interest groups support the fundamental goal of political parties in the political process. d. For one of the forms of support you described in (c), explain two different ways in which that form of support helps interest groups to achieve their fundamental goal in the political process. http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/_ap06_gopo_us_sg.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/members/repository/ap06_usgopo_samples_q1.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/members/repository/ap06_go-po_us_q&a_final.pdf

(2010 Q1) Individuals often form groups in order to promote their interests. The Constitution contains several provisions that protect the rights of individuals who try to promote their interests in a representative democracy. a. Explain two provisions in the Bill of Rights that protect individuals who try to influence politics. b. Interest groups engage in a variety of activities to affect public policy. Explain how each of the following is used by interest groups to exert influence over policy. i. Grassroots mobilization ii. Lobbying of government institutions iii. Litigation c. Describe one specific federal governmental regulation of interest groups. http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap10_us_govt_politics_scoring_guidelines.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap10_us_govt_politics_q1.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap10_us_go_po_qa.pdf

(2010 Q 3) Over the last several decades, the composition of the Democratic and Republican parties has changed in important ways. A major partisan shift has occurred in the South, but other demographic changes have also been identified. Changes in party composition are reflected at different rates in presidential elections than in congressional elections. a. Identify one specific trend evident in the figure below. b. Choose two of the following and use each to explain why southern voters from 1948 to 2000 were electing Democratic candidates to Congress more frequently than choosing Democratic candidates for the presidency. i. Incumbency advantage ii. Gerrymandering iii. Differences between state and national parties c. Several other changes in party composition have emerged in the past few decades. Select three of the following groups and for each explain how parties have changed in composition with respect to that group. i. Catholics ii. Labor union members iii. Women iv. Social conservatives http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap10_us_govt_politics_scoring_guidelines.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap10_us_govt_politics_q3.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap10_us_go_po_qa.pdf

(2012 Q 4) Interest groups seek to influence political processes in ways that benefit members. In doing so, however, they may not act in the overall public interest. a. Describe two techniques interest groups use to influence elections. b. Explain how interest groups use each of the following to influence government decisionmaking. i. Issue Networks (also known as Iron Triangles) ii. Amicus Curiae briefs c. Explain how each of the following services limit interest group influence. iii. The media iv. Pluralism http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap12_us_govt_politics_scoring_guidelines.pdf http://apcentral.collegeboard.com/apc/public/repository/ap12_us_govt_and_politics_q4.pdf http://media.collegeboard.com/digitalservices/pdf/ap/ap12_us_gov_pol_qa_.pdf

(2014, Q 4) (a) Define party polarization. (b) Identify a trend shown in the graph above. (c) Describe two causes of party polarization in Congress. (d) Describe one effect of party polarization on congressional policy making. http://media.collegeboard.com/digitalservices/pdf/ap/ap14_united_states_government_and_politics_%20scoring_guidelines.pdf http://media.collegeboard.com/digitalservices/pdf/ap/apcentral/ap14_us_govt_and_politics_q4.pdf http://media.collegeboard.com/digitalservices/pdf/ap/apcentral/ap14-us-gov-pol-qa.pdf

(2015 Q3) The framers created the Electoral College to elect the president of the United States. This system influences the campaign strategies of presidential candidates. (a) Describe one reason that the framers chose to use the Electoral College as the method to elect the president. (b) Describe the message the cartoon above conveys about presidential elections. (c) Explain why California, Texas, and New York do not appear prominently in the cartoon above. (d) Describe two campaign tactics presidential candidates use to win the key states identified in the cartoon above https://secure-media.collegeboard.org/digitalservices/pdf/ap/ap15_united_states_government_and_politics_sg.pdf https://secure-media.collegeboard.org/digitalservices/pdf/ap/apcentral/ap15_us_go_po_q3.pdf https://secure-media.collegeboard.org/digitalservices/pdf/ap/ap15-us-gopo-student-performance-qa.pdf