All AP US Government Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #151 : Civil Rights, Amendments, And Court Cases
Which clause was invoked in the Supreme Court decision Lee v. Weisman (1992), a case that involved the separation of church and state concept?
Elastic clause
Establishment clause
Fairness doctrine
Necessary and proper clause
Compact clause
Establishment clause
In the case of Lee v. Weisman (1992), the Supreme Court sided with Weisman and declared that the establishment clause was violated when a graduation speaker at a public school included prayer. The establishment clause of the 1st Amendment protects against the government sponsoring religion and forcing it onto any person.
Example Question #152 : Civil Rights, Amendments, And Court Cases
What was the significance of the Supreme Court case Buckley v. Valeo (1976)?
This case resulted in the formation of the EPA after extreme polluting led to the degradation and near destruction of Lake Erie.
This case led to the first conviction in the Watergate scandal, against former President Richard M. Nixon's chief of staff.
This case resulted in a strengthening of the 1st Amendment when Vietnam protesters were allowed to assemble and protest outside of the White House.
This case was brought against members of OPEC for their role in the gas shortage of the 1970s, ending the shortage.
This case further defined the rules and regulations of money in politics, and the ruling allowed for a candidate to spend unlimited sums on his or her campaign.
This case further defined the rules and regulations of money in politics, and the ruling allowed for a candidate to spend unlimited sums on his or her campaign.
Buckley v. Valeo (1976) was significant because it was the next evolutionary step after the Federal Election Campaign Act was enacted into law. There was a blanket need for reform in politics – Nixon’s Watergate scandal put solving corruption in politics at a premium – and much of the Federal Election Campaign Act was perceived, by some, to be too extreme. The Supreme Court made impactful rulings in this case, and the debate over these rulings has raged in the Supreme Court to this day. Perhaps the most important judgment from this case was the Court’s decision that a limitation on a candidate’s spending was unconstitutional.
Example Question #152 : Civil Rights, Amendments, And Court Cases
Please select the most influential outcome of the Supreme Court’s 1803 ruling in the case Marbury v. Madison.
The definition of key political questions
The establishment of appellate jurisdiction
The practice of judicial activism
The power of judicial review
The power of judicial review
Perhaps the most landmark Supreme Court case in the nation’s entire history is Marbury v. Madison, which was undertaken by the Court in 1803, with lauded Chief Justice John Marshall presiding. Marshall’s historic ruling established the Supreme Court’s power of judicial review, which is the Court’s right to assess acts of Congress and the Executive Branch to make certain that they are in line with the Constitution. Judicial review also states that the Court has the complementary ability to declare Congressional and Executive actions unconstitutional and thus null and void. This principle was crucial in establishing the scope and power of the fledgling Supreme Court, thus ensuring that the Court would stand as the final legal interpreter of the Constitution, with the power to prevent actions undertaken by even the President himself.
Example Question #41 : Notable Court Cases
Why was the Supreme Court decision in Marbury v. Madison important?
It made slavery illegal in theory though not in practice
It granted the Federal Government implied powers
It firmly established the principle of judicial review
It institutionalized the federal central bank
It made the Constitution the supreme law of the nation
It firmly established the principle of judicial review
Marbury v. Madison (1803) is a landmark Supreme Court case that defined the separation of power for the judicial branch. Defining the power of the courts to strike down laws and acts of the legislative branch that they deemed unconstitutional.
Example Question #42 : Notable Court Cases
Which early Supreme Court case established the implied powers of the national government over the states?
McColloch v. Maryland
Marburry v. Madison
Mapp v. Ohio
New Jersey v. T.L.O
McColloch v. Maryland
In McCulloch v. Maryland the Supreme Court ruled that the federal government had the right to establish a national bank and that the states couldn't tax that bank. This expanded the implied powers of the national government. Although all of the other court cases are important, none of them expanded the implied implied powers of the national government.
Example Question #43 : Notable Court Cases
Which of the following Supreme Court cases enforced students' right to due process of law?
Goss v. Lopez
Miranda v. Arizona
Engle v. Vitale
Grutter v. Bollinger
Goss v. Lopez
In Goss v. Lopez the Supreme Court ruled that states that provide free education for all cannot deprive the right to due process from its students. Miranda v. Arizona established that people must be read their rights at the time of an arrest. Engle v. Vitale prohibited prayer in schools. Grutter v. Bollinger allowed colleges to promote diversity.
Example Question #44 : Notable Court Cases
The Supreme Court case Marbury v. Madison established that __________.
Congress has the exclusive right to regulate interstate commerce
the Supreme Court has the right to review all constitutional amendments
slaves would count for three-fifths representation when states were apportioning seats in Congress
the government has the right to establish a national bank
the Court has the right to overturn an act of Congress
the Court has the right to overturn an act of Congress
The Supreme Court case of Marbury v. Madison (1803) centered around Secretary of State James Madison trying to block the appointment of certain court justices even though they had been approved by the Senate. The Court's ruling established several different precedents, but by far the most important was that the Court had the right to overturn acts of Congress and deem them unconstitutional. This was not a power explicitly given to the Supreme Court in the Constitution, and the decision was highly controversial at the time.
Example Question #41 : Court Cases
What was the basis of the verdict in Mapp v. Ohio?
The Equal Protection Clause
The exclusionary rule
The Commerce Clause
The right to privacy
The Necessary and Proper Clause
The exclusionary rule
When Dollree Mapp was suspected of criminal activities, the police searched her home. During their search, they found obscene photos and subsequently arrested Mapp. Though she was sent to prison, Mapp appealed her case with the claim that the police violated her fourth amendment rights against unreasonable searches. The Supreme Court ruled in Mapp's favor, stating that evidence obtained when the police violated her fourth amendment rights was invalid. This is known as the exclusionary rule.
Example Question #42 : Court Cases
A certain court case established that a statute can only be constitutional when it "has a secular legislative purpose," "neither advances nor inhibits religion," and "does not foster excessive government entanglement with religion." Which case was this?
Gitlow v. New York
Engel v. Vitale
Lemon v. Kurtzman
Near v. Minnesota
Brown v. Board of Education
Lemon v. Kurtzman
Lemon v. Kurtzman established the "Lemon Test," whose three criteria served to determine whether a law was constitutional or not as it related to religion. Engel v. Vitale dealt with prayer in school; Brown v. Board of Education involved the Equal Protection Clause; Near v. Minnesota involved freedom of the press; and Gitlow v. New York involved the Free Speech Clause.
Example Question #43 : Court Cases
Which Supreme Court case ruled that it was constitutionally sound to require only men to register for the draft and military service?
United States v. Virginia
Rostker v. Goldberg
United States v. Texas
Roe v. Wade
Gibbons v. Ogden
Rostker v. Goldberg
The Supreme Court case, Rostker v. Goldberg (1981), held that the law requiring only men to register for the draft and for military service was constitutionally sound and could stand. The issue arose after President Carter reinstituted the draft in 1980, following the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, and recommended that women be included as possible draftees.