Question 1
Question
How many spots are in the House of Reps?
Question 2
Question
How many Senators are there?
Question 3
Question
How long is a Senate term?
Question 4
Question
How long is a House of Reps term?
Question 5
Question
Define Bicameral
Answer
-
2 camels
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2 congresses
-
2 branches or chambers
Question 6
Question
House of reps have the power to:
Answer
-
pass legislation
-
pick senator
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impeach
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hold debates
Question 7
Question 8
Question
How many presidents have been impeached?
Question 9
Question
If no candidate gets majority electoral votes then ______ decides
Answer
-
Senate
-
Congress
-
House of reps
-
My mom
Question 10
Question
________ can ratify treaties.
Answer
-
President
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Senate
-
Congress
-
House of Reps
Question 11
Question
How many votes from the Senate does it take to ratify treaty?
Question 12
Question
All proposed tax bills come from ___________.
Answer
-
Senate
-
House of Reps
-
Congress
-
president
Question 13
Question
Connecticut compromise also known as the ____________.
Question 14
Question
The Great Compromise dealt with __________________________.
Question 15
Question
Which bicameral branch is considered the upper house?
Answer
-
House of Reps.
-
Senate
-
Neither
Question 16
Question
Which article of the Constitution sets forth the responsibilities of the president?
Answer
-
Article II
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Article I
-
Article III
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all of them
Question 17
Question
According to the Constitution, the minimum age requirement for the president is
Answer
-
forty
-
thirty-five
-
forty-five
-
thirty
Question 18
Question
The powers of the president as outlined in the Constitution are
Answer
-
extensively and specifically described
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very similar to the powers of a parliamentary executive
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briefly stated and comparatively vague
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more elaborately described than the powers of Congress.
Question 19
Question
The Constitution does not give the president power to
Answer
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veto legislation
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serve as administrative head of the nation
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serve as commander-in-chief of the military
-
declare war
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convene sessions of Congress
Question 20
Question
It takes a _________ vote of Congress to overturn a presidential veto
Answer
-
a moajority
-
one-third
-
two-thirds
-
100%
Question 21
Question
Researchers of both chambers (house & senate)
Answer
-
Joint committees
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Conference committee
-
Select committee
-
Subcommittee
Question 22
Question
Experts who propose the legislation
Answer
-
Joint Committee
-
Subcommittee
-
Select Committee
-
Conference Committee
Question 23
Question
Serve for a specific purpose ex: (debt reduction)
Answer
-
Joint Committee
-
Subcommittee
-
Select Committee
-
Conference Committee
Question 24
Question
They negotiate differences between two chambers
Answer
-
Joint committee
-
Select Committee
-
Subcommittee
-
Conference Committee
Question 25
Question
_______ are party enforcers (make sure people vote for their party)
Answer
-
Whips
-
President
-
Secretaries
-
Party representatives
Question 26
Question
Significance of Article 1 section 1:
Answer
-
States who can be president
-
States who can vote
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States who can be in the Senate
-
States who can be in the House of reps.
Question 27
Question
How do you meet regulations to be president?
Answer
-
35 years old, natural born citizen, 14 years living US
-
35 years old, natural born citizen, 41 years living in US
-
25 years old, foreign citizen, 14 years living in US
-
30 years old, natural born citizen. 12 years living in US
Question 28
Question
Powers not specifically said in the Constitution
Answer
-
Inherent Powers
-
Constitutional Powers
-
Implied Powers
-
Enumerated Powers
Question 29
Answer
-
Presidency
-
Congress
-
Judiciary
Question 30
Answer
-
Congress
-
Presidency
-
Judiciary
Question 31
Answer
-
Congress
-
Judiciary
-
Presidency
Question 32
Question
•Judges have their jobs for
Answer
-
2 years
-
6 years
-
4 years
-
lifetime
Question 33
Question
Act of waging war against united states or aiding enemy against United States
Question 34
Question
Used when federal officials come across laws questionable for being unconstitutional
Answer
-
Checks & Balances
-
Judicial Activism
-
Judicial Review
-
Judicial Supremacy
Question 35
Question
The Judicial Procedures Reform Bill of 1937:a legislative initiative proposed by U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt to add more justices to the U.S. Supreme Court. Roosevelt's purpose was to obtain favorable rulings regarding New Deal legislation that the court had ruled unconstitutional. (frequently called the "court-packing plan")
Question 36
Question
What court case reflects Judicial Review?
Answer
-
Plessy vs. ferguson
-
Marybury vs. madison
Question 37
Question
What year was Judicial review introduced?
Question 38
Question
In order for a bill to get veto, both chambers (senate & House) need to have a 2/3 vote.
Question 39
Question
Vass majority of court cases start?
Answer
-
District Court
-
State Court
-
Supreme Court
Question 40
Question
3 basic functions:
Answer
-
Settle disputes, interpret laws, judicial review
-
start conflicts, make laws, judicial review
-
Settle disputes, make laws, judicial review
Question 41
Question
Past court decisions influence how courts rule on the same matter in the future
Answer
-
common law
-
civil law
-
statutory law
Question 42
Question
Set of cases that they are able to trial
Answer
-
Jurisdiction
-
Venue
-
Competence
Question 43
Question
How many tiers of federal court system?
Question 44
Question
___________ approves judges?
Question 45
Question
___________ appoints judges?
Question 46
Question
__________ courts have original jurisdiction
Question 47
Question
How many circuit courts in U.S?
Question 48
Question
How many district courts in U.S?
Question 49
Question
Two types of law that make up public law?
Answer
-
Civil and Criminal
-
Statutory and Criminal
-
Civil and Statutory
Question 50
Question
Federal judges salaries
Answer
-
Can be reduced
-
Can't be reduced
-
stay the same
Question 51
Question
Known as Originator of Judicial Review.
Answer
-
John Marshall
-
Thomas Jefferson
-
Richard Nixon
-
George W. Bush
Question 52
Question
• 4 scenarios where federal courts have original jurisdiction:
1) Causes involving treaties with other countries
2) Cases involving U.S constitution
3) Cases where the law at issue is a federal law
4) Someone sues U.S government for wronging them in a way
Question 53
Question
FIAT JUSTITIA is Latin for ‘‘Let justice be done"
Question 54
Question
Every two years, _________ of the Senate must stand for reelection.
Answer
-
One fourth
-
One Half
-
One third
-
All
Question 55
Question
All U.S. Senators were no longer chosen by state legislatures after the passage of the
Answer
-
Thirteenth Amendment
-
Seventeenth Amendment
-
Sixteenth Amendment
-
Nineteenth Amendment
Question 56
Question
Every two years, how many of the 435 House seats are up for reelection at the same time?
Answer
-
All
-
One quarter
-
One half
-
One third
Question 57
Question
The redistribution of seats among the states every ten years after a census is known as
Answer
-
redistricting
-
reapportionment
-
gerrymandering
-
reallocation
Question 58
Question
A president can be impeached by the _________ and tried and removed from office by the __________.
Answer
-
House; House
-
Senate; House
-
House; Senate
-
Senate; Senate
Question 59
Question
Which of the following powers is the exclusive power of the Senate?
Question 60
Question
The power to declare war resides with:
Answer
-
The House and Senate together
-
The House Armed Services Committee
-
The House of Representatives
-
The President only
Question 61
Question
The American public generally
Answer
-
holds Congress as an institution in higher regard than it holds individual members of Congress
-
holds individual members of Congress in higher regard than it holds Congress as an institution
-
holds Congress in higher regard than it holds the president
-
holds neither Congress nor its members in high regard
Question 62
Question
The practice of altering district lines for partisan advantage after the census is also known as
Answer
-
redistricting
-
reapportionment
-
gerrymandering
-
cloture