| Hints | |
| Private groups who purchase advertising, and in this advertising they can say what they want as long as they are not being told what to say by a candidate. | |
| paid commercial advertisements that get issues across. Less favored by the public, ironically, because they are more informative. | |
| Free screen time on news programs and the like. | |
| Occurs with drawing the boundaries of political districts in bizarre or unusual shapes to make it easy for candidates of the party in power to win elections in those districts | |
| Occurs with the drawing the boundaries of political districts so that districts are very unequal in population | |
| When Congress members run for re-election, they usually get a lot of votes | |
| wanted to reform the reforrms of the 1970s. | |
| Riding to office on the coat tails of a better known or more popular candidate; any effort to obtain straight ticket voting | |
| Involves for voter to know information about the candidate and the issues that they stand for | |
| involves looking at how things have gone in the recent past and then voting for the party that controls the white house if we like what has happened and voting against the party i | |
| prescribed oration that candidates give on issues and stances to avoid slips of the tongue which prove quite detrimental to campaigns. | |
| An election prior to the general election in which voters select the candidate who will run on each party’s ticket. | |
| An election used to fill an elective office. | |
| a question raised in an election that divides the candidates as well as the voters. | |
| parties seeking a single policy | |