49. Iron triangles are made up of
a. economic interests, citizen activists, and government interest groups.
b. lobbyists, interest groups, and court cases used to promote government action to help the interest of these
groups.
c. legislators, bureaucrats, and interest groups that make or preserve policies that benefit their respective
interests.
d. political parties, interest groups, and voters who want their candidates to win.
e. watchdog citizens, presidential advisors, and members of the federal bureaucracy that make policies that
benefit their respective interests.
50. A major power that Congress has over the federal bureaucracy is the
a. authority to select high-level bureaucrats.
b. power to refuse to appropriate funds for a particular agency.
c. authority to fire bureaucrats for not executing policy passed by Congress.
d. power to find agency actions unconstitutional.
e. power to appoint agency heads.
51. Contrast government corporations with their private-sector counterparts. Should the Federal Government privatize
government corporations? Why or why not?