AP Comparative Government Unit 4 Notes: How Parties, Elections, and Rules Shape Political Power

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25 Terms

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Political party

An organized group that seeks to gain and maintain power in government by running candidates for office, coordinating campaigns, and advancing a set of policy goals (a platform).

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Interest group

An organization that tries to influence public policy but does not usually run candidates for office under its own label.

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Social movement

Broad, often less formal collective action (e.g., mass protests) aimed at social or political change.

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Linkage institution

An institution (such as political parties) that connects citizens to the government by translating public preferences into governing decisions.

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Recruit and nominate candidates

A core party function in which parties select who receives the party label, often determining which candidates are viable.

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Organize government

A party function in which parties structure legislative voting blocs, leadership roles, and committee assignments.

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Informational shortcut (party label)

The idea that party identity helps voters infer priorities without knowing every policy detail, simplifying voter choice.

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Mobilize participation

A party function involving encouraging turnout, rallying supporters, and building campaign networks.

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Build coalitions

A party function—especially in multiparty systems—in which parties negotiate to form governing alliances.

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Clientelism

Politics based on exchanging targeted material benefits (cash, jobs, services) for political support rather than programmatic policy competition.

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Party discipline

The extent to which elected members vote with their party; often stronger when party leaders control candidate placement (e.g., closed-list PR).

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Party institutionalization

The degree to which parties are stable over time with routinized rules and predictable patterns rather than being fragile or personalistic.

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Party system

The overall pattern of party competition in a country, including how many significant parties matter and how power is distributed/alternates.

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One-party system

A party system in which only one party legally governs and opposition is banned or politically meaningless.

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Dominant-party system

A system where multiple parties may exist and compete, but one party wins consistently over long periods due to advantages like resources, rules, or unfairness.

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Two-party system

A party system where two major parties dominate and smaller parties rarely win national power.

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Multiparty system

A system in which several parties are politically important and coalition governments are common.

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Competitive authoritarianism

A regime type where elections and opposition exist, but competition is skewed by unfair advantages (e.g., media control, harassment, biased administration).

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Electoral system

The rules that convert votes into political power (such as seats in a legislature or victory in an executive election).

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Single-member district plurality (SMDP) / First-past-the-post (FPTP)

A district-based plurality system with one representative per district; the candidate with the most votes wins, even without a majority.

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Runoff (two-round election)

A majoritarian election rule in which, if no candidate wins an absolute majority in the first round, top candidates compete in a second round.

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Proportional representation (PR)

An electoral system that allocates legislative seats so parties’ seat shares more closely match their vote shares, often using multi-member districts and party lists.

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District magnitude

The number of seats elected per district; higher district magnitude generally increases proportionality and helps smaller parties win seats.

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Legal threshold

The minimum vote share a party must win to gain representation in a PR system, reducing fragmentation but potentially excluding small/minority viewpoints.

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Strategic voting

Voting for a less-preferred viable candidate/party to prevent an even less-preferred outcome, especially common in FPTP systems where small parties struggle to win districts.

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