All AP US Government Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #4 : State Election Proceedings
The term “frontloading” refers to which of the following?
The allocation of the most funds to the states that joined the Union first
Writing the most important items into the beginning of pieces of legislation
More voters showing up for presidential elections than midterm elections
The President passing as many laws as he can in the first 100 days of his term
States moving their primaries earlier and earlier to have more influence on the outcome
States moving their primaries earlier and earlier to have more influence on the outcome
The correct answer is "States moving their primaries earlier and earlier to have more influence on the outcome." States who have earlier primaries have more influence over the outcome of the nomination process. Because of this, states have moved their dates earlier and earlier in the calendar year, in a process known as frontloading.”
Example Question #1 : Voting And Participation
In what election did a third-party last win at least one state?
The 1980 election
The 1964 election
The 1992 election
The 1968 election
The 1976 election
The 1968 election
The Presidential election of 1968 was the last election in which a third-party candidate from outside the Democrat-Republican bloc was able to carry at least one state in an election. The independent candidate, George Wallace, won five Southern states by campaigning in favor of the continuation of segregation. The election is also considered an important realignment election, as much of the New Deal bloc of voters migrated towards Richard Nixon’s promise to “restore law and order.”
Example Question #2 : Voting And Participation
The primary issues of the 1928 election were __________
preventing the Great Depression from spiralling out of control and Prohibition.
maintaining a strong economy and Prohibition.
World War Two and anti-Catholic sentiment.
Prohibition and anti-Catholic sentiment.
World War Two and preventing the Great Depression from worsening.
maintaining a strong economy and Prohibition.
The election of 1928 was won in a landslide by the Republican candidate, Herbert Hoover. He ran on the platform of opposition to prohibition and promising to maintain a strong economy. The booming 20s, as they are now often called, was a time of great economic growth and was firmly associated with the Republican Party; however, less than a year into Hoover’s Presidency the Great Depression broke out and he was voted out of office in the election of 1932 as emphatically as he was elected in 1928.
Example Question #3 : Voting And Participation
The general public directly elects
I) the Senate.
II) the House of Representatives.
III) Supreme Court Justices.
IV) the President.
V) the Vice-President.
I, II, III, IV, and V
I and II
IV and V
I, II, and V
I, II, III, and V
I and II
The general public only “directly” elects representative to the Senate and to the House. Supreme Court Justices are appointed by the President and approved by Congress. The President and Vice-President are voted for by the general public, but in an election the public is actually voting for electors who, through the electoral college, vote for the President and Vice-President. They key word of the question is "directly."
Example Question #4 : Voting And Participation
The vast majority of congressional elections are won by __________.
Democrats
newcomers
Independents
incumbents
Republicans
incumbents
Incumbents (politicians who already hold the position for which they are running) win the vast majority of congressional elections. In some election cycles, the figure has been as high as ninety-percent.
Example Question #5 : Voting And Participation
Which of these statements about the likelihood of various groups voting is not true?
Younger people are more likely to vote than older people.
Wealthy people are more likely to vote than poor people.
Well-educated people are more likely to vote than those with no higher education.
Married people are more likely to vote than single people.
Younger people are more likely to vote than older people.
All of these statements are true except that younger people are more likely to vote than older people. Young people, those in their twenties in particular, are notoriously difficult to get to the polls whereas older people tend to turn out in overwhelming numbers.
Example Question #6 : Voting And Participation
A meeting of local party members in order to decide which issues to focus on and to select candidates for elections is called a __________.
college
lobby
secondary
caucus
primary
caucus
A caucus is the name given to the meeting of local members of a political party to decide the platform and issues of that political party and to select candidates for election. Caucuses were more prominent in the early part of the twentieth century than they are today, but they are still part of the electoral process in places like Iowa.
Example Question #7 : Voting And Participation
Which Presidential election has had the highest voter turnout, by percentage of total eligible voters, in United States history?
1964
1980
2008
1930
1876
1876
The Presidential election of 1876 had the highest percentage of the population turning out to vote in United States history, narrowly beating the pre-Civil War election of 1860. It was an election marked by a stark regional divide between the Republican North and the Democratic South (although New York voted Democratic). When there is stark regional differences voter turnout is generally higher, and during the pre-Civil War and immediate post-Civil War era of American politics, voter turnout was the highest it has ever been—around eighty percent.
Example Question #8 : Voting And Participation
Which of these is most likely to be the result of a dealignment election?
A fall in the number of votes for an independent candidate
A divided government
A dramatic decline of the percentage of the population who participates in the election
A rise in the number of votes for an independent candidate
The President is replaced after his first term
A rise in the number of votes for an independent candidate
In a dealignment election the population generally rejects the two major parties and favors an independent candidate. This occurs occasionally in American history, but has shown no signs of happening in recent years, even when the two major political parties fall out of touch with the issues that concern the common man.
Example Question #338 : Ap Us Government
What is gerrymandering?
A non-controversial process by which the states use reapportionment to change the number of electors each state has
None of the answers are correct
The politically-charged process by which the federal legislature uses redistricting to draw district lines in ways that favor the party in power
The politically-charged process by which state legislatures use redistricting to draw district lines in ways that favor the party in power.
The politically-charged process by which the state legislatures use redistricting to draw district lines to favor the election of US Senators within the state
The politically-charged process by which state legislatures use redistricting to draw district lines in ways that favor the party in power.
Gerrymandering is often a difficult subject to tackle, and this question is not easy. That said, there are several hints that pave the way to knocking out many of the answers. For one, the federal legislature (Congress) does NOT redistrict the states. States are responsible for drawing their own district lines. The other easily determined answer is the one reading “. . . to favor the election of US Senators within the state.” Remember that each state gets two US Senators (that distinction is important, because most states have STATE Senates as well), which are elected state-wide. Thus there is no such thing as redistricting for US Senators. Finally, states have nothing to do with reapportionment; reapportionment occurs after the conclusion of the Census which determines the number of people in each state, and thus the number of House members.
Now, the correct answer. Gerrymandering is the process by which state legislatures redistrict (that is redraw district lines) in ways that heavily favor the majority party. One of the ways, for example, is by taking a solid core of the opposing party and hacking off chunks of that district into the surrounding districts, thus diluting the voting power of the opposing party.
Lastly, remember that gerrymandering is named after Elbridge Gerry, the governor of Massachusetts who signed into law a highly partisan redistricting plan that heavily favored his party. One of the oddly-drawn districts vaguely resembled a salamander, leading a newspaper to name it the “Gerry-mander.”