How do European parties differ from American parties?
What will be an ideal response?
In Europe, where there are no primary elections, parties are stronger and have much tighter control over nominations, campaigns, candidate funding, and elections. American parties, due to federalism and a tradition of individualism, remain loose associations of local, state, and national organizations. The European proportional representation system also results in the viability of smaller parties that can get representation in legislatures even with a small proportion of the vote.
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The technique of __________ lobbying was used to defeat the nomination of federal judge Robert Bork to the U.S. Supreme Court
Answer:
Many lawyers rarely, if ever,
a. spend time counseling their clients about the proper course of action in anticipation of the reactions of courts, agencies, or third parties. b. draft documents—such as contracts, wills, deeds, and leases—for their clients. c. engage in negotiations (such as plea bargains or pretrial settlements). d. argue cases in a courtroom.