Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Government
- Press
- No prior restrictions
- National Security
- Libel
- Printing Lies
- Reckless disregard of truth
- Journalists
- Commentators
- Civil Rights
- (1863)13th= No slavery
- (1868) 14th
- i. Anyone born or naturalized is a citizen
- ii. Due process and equal protection clause
- cont ii. No 3/5th , all males 21 and up can vote
- (1870) 15th= Voting cannot be denied due to race, color, or servitude
- Plantation
- Plessy vs. Fergusons (1896)
- Seperate but equal
- Jim Crow Laws
- Brown vs. Board of Education (1954)
- NAACP: Seperate is never equal
- (1920) 19th= Womens Sufferage
- (1964) 24th= No pole taxes
- (1971) 26th= 18 and up can vote
- Voting Right Act of 1965
- No barriers to vote, 18 and up citizen, district to register
- EPC
- 1. Resonable Basis Test
- Things that cannot be changed
- 2. Strict Scrutiny Test
- Race, Color, national again, first amend-religion
- Intermediate Scrutiny Test
- Gender, religion (practice), disability
- i. Overwhelming powerful social purpose
- Must be at least equal
- Civil Rights Act of 1964
- 1955 Federal Courts, Attorney General, Affirmative Action, Positive Steps
- Bakke (1978): unconstitutional
- Gratz/Grutter: Balinger (2003)
- GPA point System
- Voting
- Suffrage
- Motor Voter act of 1993: DMV
- Primaries, caucuses, convention
- Primaries
- Regular, Registered voters, can vote, 1/4
- Caucuses
- Only party, elites can vote, 3/4
- Voting Systems
- Winner takes all
- Proportional representation
- Districts
- Mulltimember
- Single member
- %of votes= % of power
- U.S. congress
- WTA single member
- 2 parties
- moderate
- Less representation
- candidate
- Europe
- PR, multimember
- Multimembers
- Extremist
- more representation
- party
- Electoral College
- # state votes= # congress
- Senate =100
- House= 435
- 48 states
- WTA Multimember
- Tie= House votes
- 2 states
- PR, Multimember
- Reps
- Older
- Wealthy
- White
- Family
- Christian
- Men
- Military
- Dems
- Women
- Younger
- Mix racially
- Education
- Poor-middle class
- Single
- Mixed religions
- Media
- The News
- Make Money
- History
- Newspaper
- Expensive
- Press
- Telegraph= "wire service"
- Negative Sensations
- Yellow Journalism
- News
- NY Times
- Wall Street Journal
- 300+ Journalists
- Television
- Headlines: 24 hours network
- CNN, MNSBC, Fox
- Private
- Business Groups, unions members, form groups, professional/ Associate
- Dentists, Doctors, Lawyers
- private group have more power because they can fund their groups
- Public
- Issues
- Siera Club, PETA, NAACP, ACLU, NRA
- Carrier Groups and public groups
- rely on memberships and donations
- "Free Riders"
- Are the ones that are getting helped from public groups but the free riders don't donate to the groups
- Lobbying
- meeting directly w/ congress
- push the govt to get the laws for every1
- Inside
- Aready Agrees
- Buy Meeting
- Outiside
- "Grassroots"-push public, get people to push
- for changing the laws
- PAC's: politcal action allow to donate commitee $10,000
- Meeting with Congress
- Questions to asks:
- 1. Constituents: Address
- 2. Group or Individuals
- 3. Donate
- House
- Citizen for 7 years
- 25 years old
- live in district
- 2 years, 100% relected, population
- Senate
- Citizen for 9 years
- 30 years old
- Lives in the state
- Term=6 years 1/3 re-elected/ 2 years, 2 per state
- Congress
- President
- "Naturalized born citizen"
- 35 years old
- Lives in the states 14 years prior
- Terms= 4 years, 2 terms of 10 years
- Every 10 years is a census
- 1. count population
- 2. Reappointment
- state going up= more reps
- Sates going down= less reps- minimum of 1 rep
- 3 Redistricting
- variation has to be less than 1%.
- 4. Gerrymandering
- maximize political, poeial groups
- Illegal way of Gerrymandering
- Large cities in all states are all democrats
- Legal way of Gerrymandering
- Dividing districts
- The term of gerrymandering comes from Gerry drew a salamander
- Re-election
- House: Gerrymandering= 97%
- Senate: No Gerrymandering 88%
- Gerrymandering affects 10%, 43 votes which is 2/3
- Incumbants
- 1. Gerrymandering (House)
- 2. Name Recongnition
- 3. Free Media
- 4. Fundraising
- 5. Franking free mail
- 6. Park Barrel "Earmarks"
- 7. Case work
- 8. You don't pay attention
- Lose?
- 1. Scandal
- 2. Blame the presidents party
- 3. Redistricting
- House Power Structure
- "Speaker of the House"
- 1. Calender (When)
- 2. Committee (Who)
- 3. Appoints Rule Chair (How)
- Party Causes
- % congress % seats
- organized, moderate, sales
district
- Majority and minority leader- run the
parties
- Agenda ( what) (partisan)
- Majority and minority whips-
keeps the members in line
- Senate
- "Vice president is the persiding officer"
- executive branch
- 1. Tie Breaker
- Majority leader (Calenders (When)
- (16) committee chair (What, When, Who)
- Moderate, Negotiation, compromise, majority and
minority whips
- Disorganized
- Impeachment
- House votes to bring final charges
- Senate holds a trial
- 2/3 remove
- "Treason, Bribery, other crimes or misdeamonors
- 2 1/2 cases
- 1. Andrew Johnson (D) (1867)
- Richard Nixon (R) Watergate Scandel
- 2. Bill Clinton (D) (1998)
- Perjury
- Oversight
- "Whistleblower" program
- Iran-Contra
- Reagan
- Nicaragua
- Socialists- Gov't buy farms, tax records, contras
- Al Quada- Taliban
- Irag
- Bathists
- The President
- 5 roles
- 4 chiefs
- 1. Commander in Chief
- Sec. of Defense
- Runs Miltary
- 2. Chief Diplomat
- Foreign affiars, Embassies, and treaties
- 3. Chief Executive officer ( Chief of staff)
- Runs federal agencies
- 4. The president is the chief persiding officer
- Head of state- figure head ( Vice President)
- 5. Legislative Leader
- 1. veto
- 2. Recommends laws
- 3. Executive orders and the budget
- Gulf of Tonkin Resolution
- Wars power resolution of 1973
- 1. if congress declares war
- 2. Congress allows use of troops
- 3. U.S.attacked
- 60 days/ 30 days removed equals a total of
90 days