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USA Election Vocabulary
1. Absentee Voting: A way people can vote when
they can't get to their polling place. They vote on a special form
and mail it in.
2. Balanced Budget: A balanced budget occurs when
total revenues equal total outlays for a fiscal year.
3. Ballot Box: A receptacle for voters' ballots.
4. Bias: A leaning in favor of or against something
or someone; partiality or prejudice.
5. Campaign: Competition by rival political candidates
and organizations for public office.
6. Campaign Chest: Money collected and set aside
for use in a political campaign.
7. Candidate:
A person running for office in an election.
8. Caucus: Meetings
of party members within a legislative body to select leaders and
determine strategy.
9. Citizen: A native or naturalized member of a
state or nation who owes allegiance to its government and is entitled
to its protection.
10. Closed Primary: A primary in which voters can
only vote for candidates in the party they are registered in. Prevents
members of other parties from "crossing over" to influence
the nomination of an opposing party's candidate.
11. Congressional Districts (CD): A political subdivision
in which the nation is divided for the purposes of elected U.S.
Representatives. Each district contains about 570,000 people.
12. Constituency: All of the voters in a particular
district.
13. Constituent: A person having the right to vote
or elect; any of the voters represented by a particular official.
14. Debate: Face-to-face discussion of candidates'
views on issues.
15. Delegate:
An individual who is appointed to represent others.
16. Democracy: A government by the people, through
free and frequent elections.
17. Early Money: Money given to a campaign before
or during the early presidential primaries. This money helps propel
a campaign.
18. Election Day: The first Tuesday after the first
Monday in November, national elections are held for the President
and Vice President in years evenly divisible by four. On even years,
voters elect members of the House of Representatives for two-year
terms and one-third of the Senate for six-year terms.
19. Electoral
College: A body of electors chosen by the voters in each
state to elect the President and Vice President of the U.S. The
number of electors in each state is equal to its number of representatives
in both houses of the U.S. Congress.
20. Exit Poll: A poll taken of a small percentage
of voters as they leave the polls, used to forecast the outcome
of an election or determine the reasons for voting decisions.
21. Federal: A union of states under a central
government distinct from the individual governments of the separate
states.
22. Federal Election Commission (F.E.C.): A commission that oversees
federal campaigns, founded in 1974.
23. Franchise: The constitutional right to vote.
24. General Elections: A regularly scheduled local,
state, or national election in which voters elect officeholders.
25. Gerrymander: The dividing of a state, county,
etc., into election districts so as to give one political party
a majority in many districts while concentrating the voting strength
of the other party into as few districts as possible.
26. G.O.P.: The Republican party, formerly known
as the Grand Old Party.
27. Grassroots: The involvement of common citizens
in an issue or campaign.
28. Gubernatorial Election: The selection of a
governor by a state's voters.
29. Hype: Slang for political ads (e.g. slick short
TV commercials).
30. Incumbent: A person currently in office.
31. Independent: A voter or candidate who does
not belong to a political party.
32. Initiative: A procedure by which a specified
number of voters may propose a statute, constitutional amendment,
or ordinance, and compel a popular vote on its adoption.
33. Issue: A point, matter, or dispute, the decision
of which is of special or public importance.
34. Landslide: An election in which a particular
victorious candidate or party receives an overwhelming mass or majority
of votes.
35. Machine: An organized group of persons that
conducts or controls the activities of a political party or organization.
36. Matching Funds: Primary presidential candidates
are eligible to receive dollar-for-dollar funds from the federal
government that match the amount they have raised through their
own efforts. They can receive matching funds only if they agree
to limit their spending to $37 million during the primaries.
37. Media: The means of communication, such as
radio, television, newspapers, and magazines, that reaches or influences
people widely. Media coverage can be slanted in favor of a particular
candidate.
38. Mudslinging: Negative, often personal, frequently
inaccurate, or exaggerated attacks of the opposition.
39. National
Conventions: A meeting held every four years by each of
the major political parties to nominate a presidential candidate.
40. Nominee:
The person chosen by a political party to serve as its representative
in a general election.
41. Non-partisan: An idea or person that does not
support a specific party, cause, or candidate.
42. Office-Block Ballot: A ballot on which the
candidates are listed alphabetically, with or without their party
designations, in columns under the office for which they were nominated.
Also called a "Massachusetts" ballot.
43. Open Primary: A primary in which voters can
vote for either party, regardless of which party they are registered
in.
44. Partisan: A supporter of a person, group, party,
or cause, especially a person who shows a biased, emotional allegiance.
45. Party: A group
of persons with common political opinions and purposes, organized
for gaining political influence and governmental control, and for
directing government policy.
46. Party-Column Ballot: A ballot listing all candidates
of a certain party for different offices under the name of that
party.
47. Platform: A public statement of the principles,
objectives, and policy of a political party, especially as put forth
by the representatives of the party in a convention to nominate
candidates for an election.
48. Political Action Committee (PAC): An organization
of 50 or more people that is created to raise money for favored
political candidates and is registered with the Federal Election
Commission (FEC). A PAC may be formed by any group, including businesses,
labor unions, and special interest bodies, and can donate up to
$5,000 per candidate per election.
49. Poll: A sampling or collection of opinions
on a subject. Also, the place where people vote.
50. Pollster: A person whose occupation is the
taking of public-opinion polls.
51. Precinct: Also called election district. One
of a fixed number of districts, each containing one polling place,
into which a city, town, etc. is divided for voting purposes.
52. Presidential Primary:
A primary used to pick delegates to the presidential nominating
conventions of the major parties.
53. Primary: A meeting of the voters of a political
party in an election district for nominating candidates for office
and choosing delegates for a convention.
54. Runoff Primary: If no candidate gets a majority
of the votes, a runoff is held to decide who should win.
55. Rhetoric: The ability to use language well,
through the practice of exaggeration, to influence others.
56. Running Mate: A presidential candidate will
choose another individual to run for vice-president. This person
is the candidate's running mate.
57. Soft Money: Funds raised by political parties
directed toward party building and not directed toward supporting
federal candidates.
58. Spin: The presentation of information that
is biased to favor the candidates. Advisors to the candidates may
engage in 'spin' in their communications to the media.
59. Split-Ticket Voting: Voting for candidates
of different parties for various offices in the same election. For
example, voting for a republican for senator and a democrat for
president.
60. Straight-Ticket Voting: Voting for candidates
who are all of the same party. For example, voting for republican
candidates for senator, representative, and president.
61. Straw Poll: A nonofficial, nonscientific study
of voter preferences in a presidential election.
62. Stump Speech: A political campaign speech,
especially one made on a campaign tour.
63. War Chest: Money set aside or scheduled for
a particular purpose or activity, like a campaign.
64. Whistle Stop: Campaigning for political office
by traveling around the country, originally by train, stopping at
small communities to address voters.
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