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AP Gov Review Guide | 2025/2026 Exam | 100+ Terms & Definitions | Constitution, Federalism, Elections

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This document is a comprehensive AP U.S. Government and Politics review guide for the 2025/2026 exam cycle, featuring over 100 critical terms, definitions, and Supreme Court precedents. Each entry includes an A+ verified explanation, providing clear, exam-accurate summaries that make complex concepts easy to understand. The format is glossary-style, ideal for memorization, rapid revision, and last-minute review sessions. It covers every major unit of the AP Government curriculum, including: Foundational Principles: social contract, popular sovereignty, pluralism, limited government, Federalist and Anti-Federalist thought Federalism: block and categorical grants, mandates, dual and cooperative federalism, devolution, supremacy clause, reserved and concurrent powers Constitutional Frameworks: Articles of Confederation, Great Compromise, amendment process, checks and balances, necessary and proper clause Civil Liberties & Civil Rights: due process, incorporation doctrine, key amendments (1st, 10th, 14th, 15th, 19th, 26th), key court cases (McCulloch v. Maryland, Gibbons v. Ogden, Brown v. Board) Political Beliefs & Behavior: political efficacy, political culture, participation, socialization, voter turnout, random sampling, ticket splitting Elections & Campaigns: Electoral College, Motor Voter Act, frontloading, soft money, PACs, BCRA (2002), campaign finance reform Congress & the Presidency: Speaker of the House, cloture, filibuster, logrolling, vetoes, term limits, party leadership, standing committees The Bureaucracy & Policy Making: iron triangles, earmarks, pork barrel legislation, discharge petitions Linkage Institutions: political parties, interest groups, media, party realignment, divided government, third parties, sound bites This review guide is ideal for: AP Government students preparing for the 2025 College Board exam High school honors/government students reviewing foundational U.S. political theory College freshmen in Political Science, Law, or Public Policy courses Tutors, teachers, and review instructors seeking a structured glossary with guaranteed exam relevance Well-organized, comprehensive, and easy to follow, this guide ensures students gain mastery of core principles and are fully prepared for both MCQs and FRQs. Keywords: AP Government, U.S. Constitution, federalism, civil liberties, civil rights, political culture, voting behavior, Supreme Court cases, foundational documents, campaign finance, interest groups, linkage institutions, electoral systems, legislative process

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Uploaded on
September 21, 2025
Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
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AP Gov Review 2025/2026 Exam
Questions and Corresponding Answers
with Surety of 100% Pass Mark



Amendment Process - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔Two Ways: 2/3rds majority in both

houses of congress then to States to ratify, or in constitutional conventions

(never been used)


Articles of Confederation - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔Pre-Constitution, was adopted by

the second continental congress in 1781 during the revolution. Limited

because states held most of the power, and congress lacked the power to

tax, regulate trade, or control money


Block Grants - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔Money sent to states to fund programs, not

specifically allocated

, Categorical Grants - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔Federal grants for specific purposes,

often with strings attached.


"Commerce" Clause - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔Inter-State Commerce Clause of the

constitution, allows congress to regulate any trade or commercial (non-

goods/trade) related activity that occurs over state lines.


Concurrent Powers - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔Powers held by both states and

federal government- like the ability to collect taxes


Cooperative Federalism - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔Cooperation among federal, state,

& local governments "marble cake" federalism


Delegated Powers - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔Powers specifically given to the federal

government by the constitution


Devolution Revolution - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔Returning powers to the States that

had been given to the federal government, product of Republican party

control of gov't


Dual Federalism - 🧠ANSWER ✔✔A system of government in which both

the states and the national government remain supreme within their own

spheres, each responsible for some policies.

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