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Questions

Question 1

According to the U.S. Constitution, as outlined in Chapter 12, what is the minimum age requirement to be eligible for the office of president?

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Question 2

Which amendment to the Constitution limited the presidency to two four-year terms?

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Question 3

What is the term for the act of charging a government official with serious wrongdoing, which the Constitution calls 'high crimes and misdemeanors'?

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Question 4

According to the text, which president was the first to use the veto as a measure of policy to block legislative initiatives he disagreed with, rather than just as a legal tool?

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Question 5

What is the concept of 'executive privilege'?

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Question 6

The Budget and Accounting Act of 1921 gave the president what significant advantage in the budget process?

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Question 7

What is the name for the informal group of advisors, consisting of the most senior appointed officers of the executive branch, that George Washington established?

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Question 8

In the modern presidential election process, which two states' early contests are mentioned in Chapter 12 as being the first to occur and tending to shrink the field of candidates?

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Question 9

According to the 'two presidencies thesis' by Aaron Wildavsky, in which area are presidents typically more successful?

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Question 10

What term describes a president's delivery of a major television address in the hope that public pressure will influence legislators?

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Question 11

Which First Lady is credited in Chapter 12 with opening the door for future first ladies to take on more active, public roles, particularly through her championing of civil rights?

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Question 12

What is a line-item veto?

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Question 13

The Emancipation Proclamation, issued by Abraham Lincoln, is provided in the text as a key example of what type of presidential action?

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Question 14

According to political scientist Richard Neustadt, as cited in Chapter 12, what is the 'power of the presidency'?

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Question 15

The phenomenon of a president's popularity spiking during an international crisis is known as what?

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Question 16

How many executive departments currently make up the president's cabinet?

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Question 17

What is the term for a short, informal meeting of party members, used in some states like Iowa, to select nominees?

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Question 18

Which presidential candidate is mentioned in Chapter 12 as being the first to fully embrace social media in their campaign?

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Question 19

What is the primary role of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB)?

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Question 20

How many electoral votes are currently required to win the presidency?

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Question 21

In the original design of the Electoral College, before the Twelfth Amendment, how was the vice president selected?

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Question 22

Which president's extensive use of radio for 'fireside chats' is highlighted as a key moment in the development of the public presidency?

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Question 23

What is the 'honeymoon period' for a new president?

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Question 24

What is a key reason provided in the text for why the vice presidency is a more powerful office today than it was in the nineteenth century?

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Question 25

What are 'executive agreements'?

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Question 26

The War Powers Resolution of 1973 was an attempt by Congress to reassert its authority in war-making, but the text suggests its main effect was to do what?

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Question 27

What does the text identify as a major reason for the growth of presidential power over the course of the twentieth century?

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Question 28

How many presidents have been both impeached by the House and removed by the Senate?

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Question 29

Which presidential action, taken by Gerald Ford, is described as unique in U.S. history?

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Question 30

According to the text, what is the 'inner cabinet'?

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Question 31

How many electoral votes did George W. Bush win the presidency by in the 2000 election?

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Question 32

What is a pro forma session of the Senate, as described in the 'Finding a Middle Ground' box?

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Question 33

President Harry Truman's desegregation of the armed forces is given as an example of what type of presidential action?

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Question 34

What was President Bill Clinton's 'E.G.G. strategy' for senior-level appointments?

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Question 35

The term 'bully pulpit' was coined by which president to describe the presidency as a platform to push an agenda to the public?

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Question 36

In the case of a tie in the Electoral College, which body is responsible for electing the president?

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Question 37

What was the 'king caucus'?

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Question 38

President George H. W. Bush's approval ratings received a significant spike, from 58 to 89 percent, following what event?

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Question 39

Presidential power to make 'recess appointments' is derived from which circumstance?

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Question 40

In two states, Nebraska and Maine, how are electoral votes divided?

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Question 41

What is the primary characteristic of 'soft power' in foreign policy?

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Question 42

What was the Supreme Court's ruling in the 1974 case United States v. Nixon?

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Question 43

The 'first hundred days' is a concept used to measure presidential effectiveness, and it was popularized during which president's first term?

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Question 44

President George W. Bush's approval rating jumped from 51 percent to what percent in the days following the 9/11 attacks?

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Question 45

What term does the text use to describe a president's use of a rule or order to bypass Congress that still has the force of law?

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Question 46

How many total electors are there in the Electoral College for the 2016 and 2020 presidential elections?

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Question 47

Who presides over the Senate, according to the Constitution, and can vote only in case of a tie?

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Question 48

What is the term for the set of permanent federal agencies that perform the day-to-day work of government?

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Question 49

What does political scientist Stephen Skowronek's concept of 'political time' refer to?

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Question 50

Which of these is NOT a formal power explicitly granted to the president in the Constitution?

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