The correct answer to this open question is the following.
Although you forgot to include the options of this question, we can say the following.
The BEST title for this list is "Ways That Citizens Can Participate in Politics."
In a democracy like the United States, citizens are able to participate in many political activities as part of their rights and obligations. US citizens participate in voting in a mayoral election, protesting against new taxes, attending a "Town Hall" meeting, or campaigning for a political candidate.
US citizens have the chance to make their voices heard and form public opinion on different topics. They can exert pressure on federal, state, and local governments when they participate in political activities. Indeed, it is very healthy that citizens participate in politics to serve as a counterbalance of the decisions governmental offices make.
The Mormon pioneers were members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church), also known as Latter-day Saints, who migrated across the United States from the Midwest to the Salt Lake Valley in what is today the U.S. state of Utah. At the time of the cease fire and planning of the exodus in 1846, the territory was owned by the Republic of Mexico, which soon after went to war with the United States over the annexation of Texas. Salt Lake Valley became American territory as a result of this war.
The journey was taken by about 70,000 people beginning with advanced parties sent out by church fathers in March 1846 after the assassination of Mormon prophet Joseph Smith made it clear the faith could not remain in Nauvoo, Illinois—which the church had recently purchased, improved, renamed and developed because of the Missouri Mormon War setting off the Illinois Mormon War. The well organized wagon train migration began in earnest in April 1847, and the period (including the flight from Missouri in 1838 to Nauvoo) known as the Mormon Exodus is, by convention among social scientists, traditionally assumed to have ended with the completion of the First Transcontinental Railroad in 1869. Not everyone could afford to transport a family by railroad, and the transcontinental railroad network only serviced limited main routes, so Wagon train migrations to the far west continued sporadically until the 20th century,
They invaded China, slaughtered a few boxers and numerous regular citizens, then they approached China to pay for harmed places of worship, dead nonnatives, and their military cost in China, and afterward they constrained China to sign unequal bargains, and it finished.