President Franklin D. Roosevelt's "court-packing" plan was largely a response to __________.
A. a similar proposal by the chief justice of the Supreme Court
B. the Supreme Court's use of judicial review to dismantle New Deal policies
C. the Supreme Court's increased workload
D. the Supreme Court's refusal to use judicial review in support of New Deal policies
B. the Supreme Court's use of judicial review to dismantle New Deal policies
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10. According to Daniel Elazar, the type of political culture found in Texas is the moralistic political culture
Indicate whether this statement is true or false.
Differentiate between democratic theory and neo-institutional theory
A) Democratic theory states that parties have grown so large that they can now afford to ignore voters, while neo-institutional theory states that parties are beholden to voter critique. B) Democratic theory states that political parties cannot afford to ignore voters, while institutional theory claims that parties can afford to disregard them. C) Neo-institutional theory claims that institutions have grown so large they govern with disregard to regional politics. D) Neo-institutional theory states that no institution, new or old, can afford to disregard voters; democratic theory is choosier
Between 1950 and 2004, ten American presidents committed United States troops to foreign soil without any declaration of war by Congress
Indicate whether the statement is true or false
The strongest third-party campaign for president took place during the 1912 election, which resulted in the third-party candidate receiving27 percent of the vote. Who was this third-party candidate and his party?
A) Robert LaFollette/Socialist B) Strom Thurmond/States' Rights C) George Wallace/Independent D) Theodore Roosevelt/Bull Moose E) Eugene V. Debs/Progressive