AP US Government : Public Policy

Study concepts, example questions & explanations for AP US Government

varsity tutors app store varsity tutors android store

Example Questions

← Previous 1 3 4 5 6 7

Example Question #1 : Groups Influencing Public Policy

In a closed-shop company __________

Possible Answers:

workers must be union members throughout their employment.

shareholders have little to no say in the running of the company.

workers cannot join or start a union throughout their employment.

The United States government provides funding to support the company.

every decision taken by the company has to be ratified by the shareholders.

Correct answer:

workers must be union members throughout their employment.

Explanation:

In a closed-shop company, as opposed to an open-shop company, workers must remain union members throughout their employment with the company. Union membership is a required condition of employment. The Taft-Hartley Act (1947) mostly outlawed closed shops, although there are loopholes and exceptions that allow some companies to continue the practice in everything but name.

Example Question #2 : Groups Influencing Public Policy

Grassroots is best described as __________.

Possible Answers:

a judicial decision designed to further extend civil rights to disenfranchised groups

an impeachment movement that begins in a localized political center

a campaign initiated by the common person to affect government policy

a collaboration between special interest groups and congressional committees designed to enact specific legislation

a judicial decision designed to increase the power of the Federal government

Correct answer:

a campaign initiated by the common person to affect government policy

Explanation:

A grassroots campaign is a movement initiated by a collection of typical citizens with the intention of garnering enough support and attention for a cause so as to affect government policy. Debate over its effectiveness in the face of special interest groups and corporate donations to campaigns have often been raised, but it remains one of the most accessible means to the common person for trying to implement change in the United States.

Example Question #1 : Groups Influencing Public Policy

Non-violent civil disobedience is most closely associated with which American reformer?

Possible Answers:

Theodore Roosevelt

Ralph Nader

Martin Luther King Jr.

Susan B. Anthony

William Jennings Bryan

Correct answer:

Martin Luther King Jr.

Explanation:

Non-violent civil disobedience is a movement associated with various political figures throughout history. It holds that violent resistance against the dominant class in society only produces crackdowns and worse conditions for the oppressed. The best way to promote change is therefore to resist without resorting to violence—through strikes, marches, demonstrations, etc. The movement is most closely associated with Martin Luther King Jr. during the Civil Rights movement.

Example Question #4 : Groups Influencing Public Policy

The intention of the Taft-Hartley Act (1947) was to __________.

Possible Answers:

limit the power of labor unions

support the growth of labor unions

limit the power of affirmative action programs

support the growth of affirmative action programs

support the extension of higher education to a greater number of Americans

Correct answer:

limit the power of labor unions

Explanation:

The Taft-Hartley Act of 1947, also called the Labor Management Relations Act, is a Federal law in the United States that was designed to limit the power and ability of the prominent labor unions of the time. Among other things, it makes it more difficult for labor unions to organize, monopolize the supply of labor, and strike. In the years leading up to the Taft-Hartley Act, many prominent American politicians and businessmen were concerned with the rising power, gained through labor unions, of the working classes. The Taft-Hartley Act was one prominent, and perhaps the most effective, way of limiting this growing power.

Example Question #2 : Groups Influencing Public Policy

The primary measure of inflation is referred to as __________.

Possible Answers:

deficit spending

the Consumer Price Index

the Gross Domestic Product

the import-export margin

the national debt

Correct answer:

the Consumer Price Index

Explanation:

The Consumer Price Index (often simply seen as the CPI) measures the fluctuations in the cost of goods in the market purchased by an average American household. It is used to measure and track inflation.

Example Question #3 : Groups Influencing Public Policy

Which of the following categories of people are not included in the iron triangle?

Possible Answers:

Judges

Both media personalities and judges

Bureaucrats

Lobbyists

Media personalities

Correct answer:

Both media personalities and judges

Explanation:

The iron triangle refers to the three groups of people who have the greatest influence over the process of law making. These groups are lobbyists, Congressmen, and bureaucrats. Although media personalities play a role in swaying public opinion, they are not members of the iron triangle. Likewise, judges are not a part of the iron triangle because they do not have influence over the creation of laws; their role involves the interpretation of the laws.

Example Question #4 : Groups Influencing Public Policy

Which branch of government contains two different bodies of representatives who create bills and other pieces of legislation?

Possible Answers:

The Judicial Branch

The President and their Cabinet

The Legislative Branch

The House of Representatives

The Executive Branch

Correct answer:

The Legislative Branch

Explanation:

The Legislative Branch is correct, as it contains the House of Representatives and the Senate. This branch serves to create different legislation and discuss various policy issues.

Example Question #1 : Policy Agendas

The Poll Tax was used primarily to __________.

Possible Answers:

prevent the poor and working class from voting in the early days of the Republic

ensure that those voting in elections were well educated

prevent any candidate from running for election over and over again

encourage African Americans to vote during and after the Civil Rights Era

prevent African Americans from voting in the Reconstruction-Era South

Correct answer:

prevent African Americans from voting in the Reconstruction-Era South

Explanation:

The Poll Tax emerged throughout the Reconstruction-Era South as a way for the governments in the South to avoid abiding by the Fifteenth Amendment. The Poll Tax stated that an individual had to pay a certain fee for registering and to vote, and it was used primarily to prevent African Americans from voting in the years after the end of the Civil War.

Example Question #2 : Policy Agendas

Jim Crow laws __________.

Possible Answers:

encouraged African Americans to vote during the Civil Rights Era.

were not supported by institutions of the United States Government

enforced racial segregation in the Reconstruction-Era South

were overturned by the Supreme Court case, Plessy v. Ferguson

prohibited African-American emancipation in the South prior to the Civil War

Correct answer:

enforced racial segregation in the Reconstruction-Era South

Explanation:

Jim Crow laws were a series of bills and rulings passed in the South, during the Reconstruction Era, which were designed to enforce racial segregation after the abolition of slavery. They differ from the Black Codes, which were used in the South prior to the Civil War to prevent African-American emancipation. The Supreme Court case, Plessy v. Ferguson (1890), reinforced the legality of Jim Crow laws by ruling that separate but equal was not unconstitutional. This ruling was overturned by the Supreme Court case, Brown v. Board of Education (1954).

Example Question #1 : Enactment Of Public Policy

The Hyde Amendment ____________.

Possible Answers:

allows the President to declare war without the consent of Congress

prohibits Congress from setting its own rate of pay and wage structure

prohibits employers from refusing to hire someone on the basis of gender discrimination

prohibits the use of certain Federal funds to pay for abortions

allows Congressmen to engage in insider trading by opening certain loopholes

Correct answer:

prohibits the use of certain Federal funds to pay for abortions

Explanation:

The Hyde Amendment is a legislative provision first passed in 1976, in the aftermath of the Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade (1973), which had legalized abortion. The Hyde Amendment prohibits the use of Federal funds to pay for abortions, except in very specific circumstances (such as rape or when the woman's life is endangered by the pregnancy). Because it only focuses on restricting the availability of Federal funding, the Hyde Amendment disproportionately targets extremely poor women.

← Previous 1 3 4 5 6 7
Learning Tools by Varsity Tutors