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AP U.S. Government and Politics | 2025/2026 Exam Questions with Answers | 100+ Key Terms, Doctrines & Court Cases | Final Review

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This comprehensive exam prep document for AP U.S. Government and Politics (2025/2026) features over 100 exam-ready questions and answers, focusing on high-yield content needed to guarantee success in official AP exams and high school assessments. It functions as a combined glossary, practice test, and summary guide, offering instant recall tools with concise, bullet-style definitions for core terms, doctrines, government structures, and political ideologies. Major content coverage includes: Foundations of American Democracy: Definitions and comparisons between direct democracy, representative democracy, and constitutional democracy. Constitutional Principles: Separation of powers, checks and balances, federalism, judicial review, and popular sovereignty. Landmark Documents and Conventions: Articles of Confederation, Constitutional Convention, Federalist Papers. The Federal Bureaucracy and Executive Power: Executive orders, executive privilege, presidential roles, budgetary processes. Congress and Legislative Process: Bicameralism, filibuster, cloture, committees, rules of procedure. Elections and Political Participation: Electoral College, primaries, voting behavior, campaign finance, interest groups. Federalism and Intergovernmental Relations: Expressed, implied, inherent, and reserved powers; types of federalism including dual, cooperative, and marble cake models. Key Political Ideologies and Movements: Conservatism, liberalism, libertarianism, socialism, environmentalism. Supreme Court and Judicial Interpretations: Major doctrines like the Necessary and Proper Clause, Commerce Clause, Supremacy Clause. Social and Demographic Concepts: Political socialization, demographics, gender gap, ethnicity, reinforcing cleavages. This document is especially useful for: AP Government students preparing for both midterms and the AP exam High school students in U.S. Civics, Political Science, or American History courses Teachers, tutors, and homeschool educators building lessons around key terms and core content College-level intro politics students needing a structured conceptual review of U.S. government foundations Its format of term + definition + context supports active recall, making it an excellent study sheet, flashcard source, or cram guide. All content is aligned with College Board’s AP curriculum framework and current academic standards. Keywords: AP Government, U.S. Constitution, federalism, executive power, interest groups, judiciary, political ideology, party systems, bureaucracy, civil liberties, political participation, campaign finance, voting behavior, legislative process, court doctrines

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Institution
AP US GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS
Course
AP US GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS

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AP US GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS
2025/2026 EXAM QUESTIONS AND
ANSWERS | 100% PASS



democracy - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔gov by the people, either directly or indirectly,

with free and frequent elections


direct democracy - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔gov in which citizens vote on laws and

select officials more directly


representative democracy - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔gov that derives its powers

indirectly from the people, who elect those who will govern; also called a

republic


constitutional democracy - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔gov that enforces recognized

limits on those who govern and allows the voice of the people to be heard

through free, fair, and relatively frequent elections

,constitutionalism - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔set of arrangements, including checks

and balances, federalism, separation of powers, rule of law, due process,

and a bill of rights, that requires leaders to listen, think, bargain, and

explain before they act or make laws. We then hold them politically and

legally accountable for how they exercise their powers.


statism - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔the idea that the rights of the nation are supreme

over the rights of the individuals residing in that nation


popular consent - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔the idea that a just gov must derive its

powers from the consent of the people it governs


majority rule - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔governance according to the expressed

preferences of the majority


majority - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔the candidate or party that wins more than half the

votes cast in an election


plurality - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔candidate or party with the most votes case in an

election, not necessarily more than half


ideology - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔a consistent pattern of beliefs about political

values and the role of gov

,theocracy - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔gov by religious leaders, who claim divine

guidance


Articles of Confederation - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔the first governing document of

the confederated states, drafted in 1777, ratified in 1781, and replaced by

the present Constitution in 1789


Annapolis Convention - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔A convention held in September

1786 to consider problems of trade and navigation, attended by five states

and important because it issued the call to Congress and the states for

what became the Constitutional Convention


Constitutional Convention - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔The convention in Philadelphia,

May 25-September 17, 1787, that framed the Constitution of the United

States


Shays' Rebellion - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔Rebellion by farmers in western

Massachusetts in 1786-1787, protesting mortgage foreclosures; led by

Daniel Shays and important because it highlighted the need for a strong

national gov just as the call for the Constitutional Convention went out


bicameralism - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔the principle of a two house legislature




COPYRIGHT©JOSHCLAY 2025/2026. YEAR PUBLISHED 2025. COMPANY REGISTRATION NUMBER: 619652435. TERMS OF USE. PRIVACY
3
STATEMENT. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

, Virginia Plan - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔initial proposal at the Constitutional

Convention made by the Virginia delegation for a strong central gov with a

bicamerl legislature, the lower house to be elected by the voters and the

upper chosen by the lower, representation based on wealth or population


New Jersey Plan - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔proposal at the Constitutional

Convention made by William Paterson of New Jersey for a central gov with

a single-house legislature in which each state would be represented

equally


Connecticut Compromise - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔compromise agreement by

states at the Constitutional Convention for a bicameral legislature with a

lower house in which representation would be based on population and an

upper house in which each state would have two senators


Three-Fifths Compromise - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔compromise agreement

between northern and southern states at the Constitutional Convention that

the three fifths of the slave population would be counted for determining

direct taxation and representation in the House of Representatives

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Institution
AP US GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS
Course
AP US GOVERNMENT AND POLITICS

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