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CHAPTER 1 AP Government Introduction. Two Main Questions in Politics  Who should govern?  Towards what ends should they work?

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Presentation on theme: "CHAPTER 1 AP Government Introduction. Two Main Questions in Politics  Who should govern?  Towards what ends should they work?"— Presentation transcript:

1 CHAPTER 1 AP Government Introduction

2 Two Main Questions in Politics  Who should govern?  Towards what ends should they work?

3 What is Political Power?  Power-ability to get others to follow your will -can be obvious or subtle  Authority- right to use power  Legitimacy- political authority conferred by law or national or state constitution -broadly accepted (if not = trouble)

4 Democracy  Two types:  Direct or Participatory- ancient Greece  Representative  Founders argued representative best for America. Why? Is it best?

5 Founding Fathers  Govt should mediate not mirror popular views  Elected officials should represent not register majority sentiments  Most citizens didn’t have time/expertise etc  Even highly educated can be manipulated by leaders  A govt working quickly can quickly do harm  Protection of civil rights and liberties shouldn’t be left to popular vote  Less chance of abuse of power, tyranny, self-serving leaders

6 Representative Democracy  Need free speech so candidates can communicate and voters believe a choice exists Could America change to Direct Democracy? -Community control -Citizen participation

7 How is political power distributed?  Majoritarian politics: elected officials are the delegates of the people and act as they would -can’t always happen; often, elite have the power *Elite= identifiable group of people who possess a disproportionate share of some resource (power, $) -make an effort to actively participate in policy making

8 Four Theories on Political Elites and Distribution of Power (Theories answer the question “Who governs?”)  Marxist view  Power elite view  Bureaucratic view  Pluralist view

9 Marxist View  Govt dominated by capitalists -govt is a machine to give legality to class interests  Two economic classes vie for power (capitalists and workers)  Whichever controls the economy controls the govt.

10 Power Elite View  Govt dominated by a few top leaders, most of whom are outside the govt.  Coalition of three groups control politics and government -Corporate Leaders -Top Military Officials -Elected Officials *Today we could add Media to the list

11 Bureaucratic View  Govt dominated by appointed officials  Govt and non-govt institutions dominated by bureaucrats who operate govt on a daily basis  Career govt workers exercise power by deciding how laws translate into action

12 Pluralist View  Competition among all affected interests shapes public policy -political resources and access to media is so scattered/unequal, no elite can have monopoly -different interests struggle to gain benefits for their members  Problems…

13 The Nature of Politics  Must understand preferences in order to understand power  Need to know who wields power but hard to discover  Can’t infer distribution of power based on what laws exist  Should only make judgments on institutions and interests after discovering how they behave in a variety of issues

14 Is democracy driven by self-interest? What explains political change?


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