All AP US Government Resources
Example Questions
Example Question #31 : Political Role Of The Presidency
Which President designed the League of Nations, the precursor to the United Nations, yet never got America to join because Congress never signed off on joining?
Abraham Lincoln
Ronald Reagan
Franklin Roosevelt
Dwight Eisenhower
Woodrow Wilson
Woodrow Wilson
Woodrow Wilson (term: 1913-1921) outlined the ways to achieve international peace, which is titled the Fourteen Points. By the time the United States finally began fighting in World War I, the whole world was struggling to grasp the size, scope, and technological warfare involved in this massive battle.
Woodrow Wilson believed that the League of Nations was one of the answers to achieving world peace. This organization could act as sort of international police force, mediation court, and think-tank for peace.
Unfortunately, not only did the United States not join, but the organization failed to have any kind of power – due in part to the United States non-involvement.
Example Question #32 : Political Role Of The Presidency
What scandal did the public become aware of after Warren Harding died in office?
Watergate scandal
Whiskey Ring
Iran-Contra affair
Petticoat affair
Teapot Dome scandal
Teapot Dome scandal
Warren Harding (term: 1921-1923) and his administration are often labeled as a corrupt Presidency, especially because of the Teapot Dome scandal. This is regarded as the first modern example of publicly exposed corruption among oil companies. The scandal also exposed the backroom dealings where the Harding administration gave contracts to specific companies they were close with, leaving an indelible smudge on Harding’s reputation. Another term for the backroom dealings described here is crony capitalism.
Example Question #33 : Political Role Of The Presidency
Which President made an unprecedented visit to Communist China in 1972?
John Kennedy
Richard Nixon
Herbert Hoover
Lyndon Johnson
Gerald Ford
Richard Nixon
Richard Nixon (term: 1969-1974) is known for the Watergate scandal, but he had many successes as President. He was often excellent with foreign affairs, and he was able to make China somewhat of an ally (and at the least not an enemy) during the Cold War. This landmark visit eventually opened up diplomatic relations between the United States and China in the late 1970s. The visit was preceded by several maneuvers from both China and the United States to ease tensions and improve relations.
Example Question #34 : Political Role Of The Presidency
Which conflict did George Bush Sr. engage America in after Saddam Hussein and the Iraqi army blitzed Kuwait and took over the capital?
The Mayaguez Rescue Operation
Persian Gulf War
Invasion of Grenada
US Intervention in Somalia
Kosovo War
Persian Gulf War
George Bush Sr. (term: 1989-1993) was able to keep Russia and China at bay during Persian Gulf War, even though both are often opposed to or critical of international U.S. military interventions. More than that, he created a strong alliance of Middle Eastern and European powers– led by a massive wave of US troops. Israel did not get directly involved, which some interpreted as a strategic play by George Bush Sr., so that the Middle Eastern countries did not have to contradict their own identities to end the Iraqi invasion of Kuwait.
Example Question #35 : Political Role Of The Presidency
What document did the United States help formulate to end the conflict between Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia, and Croatia in 1995?
Gentleman's Agreement
Camp David Accords
Dayton Peace Accords
Treaty of Relations
Potsdam Agreement
Dayton Peace Accords
Bill Clinton (term: 1993 – 2000): and his staff (notably his Assistant Secretary of State Richard Holbrooke) led the negotiations to end the Bosnian War with the Dayton Peace Accords. This was a deeply complex and problematic time in this region of the world. The Bosnian War was part of the Yugoslav Wars that went on for years and had multiple causes.
President Clinton sent over 20,000 U.S. troops in conjunction with NATO forces to ensure that war did not break out again, though much of the fighting continued in and around the region.
Example Question #36 : Political Role Of The Presidency
Which President broke away from the Presidential precedent of only serving two terms that eventually led to the creation of the 22nd Amendment?
Calvin Coolidge
James Buchanan
Franklin Roosevelt
Chester Arthur
Andrew Johnson
Franklin Roosevelt
Franklin Roosevelt (term: 1933-1945) broke the tradition of U.S. Presidents stepping down after two terms in office. He ran for unprecedented third and fourth terms– this alone demonstrates the robust popularity he had among voters. The 22nd Amendment was passed a few years after he died in office, making Roosevelt the only President to ever serve three consecutive terms.
Example Question #37 : Political Role Of The Presidency
The following is adapted from James Madison’s Federalist No. 10, a paper considered to be fundamental to the American political process.
“So strong is this propensity of mankind to fall into mutual animosities that where no substantial occasion presents itself the most frivolous and fanciful distinctions have been sufficient to kindle their unfriendly passions and excite their most violent conflicts. But the most common and durable source of factions has been the various and unequal distribution of property. Those who hold and those who are without property have ever formed distinct interests in society. Those who are creditors, and those who are debtors, fall under a like discrimination.”
Based on the excerpt from Federalist No. 10, what does Madison describe as the most visible reason for factions’ existence?
Uneven distribution of property
Taxes
Violent domestic conflicts
Immigration from less developed nations
Racial and economic discrimination
Uneven distribution of property
James Madison (1809-1817) saw the uneven allocation of property as a major issue. This was the most apparent separation of groups in society – Madison saw those with property taking one side in political affairs and those without property supporting the opposite side. With the argument simplified to a concept of haves and have-nots, Madison argues that two massive political interest groups could arise.
The factions, Madison’s term for interest groups, in this case share similar struggles and political roadblocks because they are diametrically opposed in this two-sided issue.
In other words, those with property will vote against those without property; those lacking property will vote against property owners.
Madison’s overarching concern with all of this is that if one of these factions becomes a large enough majority, the democracy will become more like a monarchy. This would feel like a return to the system they ended with the Revolutionary War, and a corrupting or ruining of the Constitution.
Example Question #37 : Political Role Of The Presidency
Which type of federalism was active during Andrew Jackson’s presidency, where the federal government and state governments were operating mostly independently?
Permissive federalism
Competitive federalism
Cooperative federalism
Creative federalism
Dual federalism
Dual federalism
Andrew Jackson (1829-1837) was President during a period of dual federalism in America. The states expected the federal government to abstain from their affairs, and tensions between the North and the South were beginning to boil while the Federal government let the states operate with a great deal of autonomy.
At one point, President Jackson passed a bill that gave some economic protection to employers in the North and his Vice President from South Carolina resigned over it.
Example Question #38 : Political Role Of The Presidency
What war resulted in the addition of California and much of the Southwest to America under James Polk’s Presidency?
Quasi War
Spanish American War
Navajo Wars
War of 1812
Mexican War
Mexican War
James Polk (term: 1845-1849) was an expansionist, who made several moves that could have resulted in wars on multiple fronts. The Mexican War provided interests to both the North and South, and resulted in much of the Southwest being annexed by America.
His aggressive land accumulations alone demonstrated Polk's willingness to use executive power decisively.
Example Question #39 : Political Role Of The Presidency
Which was not a result of the 1850 Compromise spearheaded by President Millard Fillmore?
Women were granted the right to vote in Washington D.C.
California was admitted as the 31st state
The Fugitive Slave Act was signed
Secession by the South was delayed
The North became enraged over several aspects of the Compromise
Women were granted the right to vote in Washington D.C.
Millard Fillmore (term: 1850-1853) managed to postpone the Civil War and the South’s secession with the Compromise of 1850, but this did not solve the issues at hand. He signed a bill into law that widened the gap between the North and South to a critical point. This law, known as the Fugitive Slave Act, was meant to appease the South while California was admitted to the Union as a state that bans slavery, or a “free” state.
The North was enraged by the Fugitive Slave Act, which added to a growing wave of momentum known as the abolitionist movement.
This was not the point in history in which women began receiving voting rights, though the women’s rights movement was gaining steam like the abolitionists.