Bunuel
Local authorities claim that following a recent report showing that the chance that a driver is involved in a car accident increases with that driver’s blood alcohol levels, they have decided to legislate the following law, which they expect to greatly reduce the number of car accidents per year: “Drivers caught with a blood alcohol concentration of 1% or more will have their driving license revoked.”
Which of the following does the local authorities’ argument rely upon?
A. The threat of a revoked license causes drivers to drink less alcohol before they drive, reducing the total number of car accidents.
B. The majority of drivers who cause accidents usually drive with 1% blood alcohol or more.
C. The majority of car accidents are not caused by drivers who drive without a license.
It's a bit of a ridiculous question, because someone with a blood-alcohol level of 1% will be dead, so it won't matter if you revoke their driver's license. They presumably mean 0.1%. The first sentence of the stem is also bizarre: "Local authorities claim... they have decided to legislate the following law". What is the word "claim" doing there? Is it possibly untrue that they will enact this law?
Anyway, to respond to Jon's points: I agree there's a potential correlation-causation error in the stem (maybe it's young drivers who are most often drunk drivers, and maybe young drivers are reckless drivers and cause a lot of accidents whether they drink or not, so even if the law works as a complete deterrent, it might have no effect), so that might be the assumption the right answer addresses.
But the argument relies on many other assumptions too, and we only need to find one of them. For example, the argument is also assuming people won't drive dramatically more often after the law is in place -- if driving increased a lot, you'd possibly have more accidents even if drivers were safer. Or more fundamentally, the argument is assuming some people right now in this locality drive with a blood-alcohol level at or near 1% (if no one does now, the law won't accomplish anything). And it's assuming there is a great number of accidents in the locality right now, because if there isn't a great number, it's hard to see how they could "greatly reduce the number". So an answer choice addressing any of these issues would have been correct.
The argument does assume that revoking licenses will have some effect on driving behaviour, or on drinking behaviour. If people are perfectly willing to drive without a license, and the law has no deterrent effect, then the law might not accomplish anything. So an answer something like C is a good answer here, though I have no idea what the phrase "the majority of car accidents" has to do with anything in C -- the argument isn't specifically relying on any particular fact about "the majority" of accidents. It's hard to evaluate answers A and B in this question, because we don't know enough about how the law will accomplish its objective, nor about driving behaviours in this location. If it's true in this place that everyone drives after drinking once in their lifetime only, then this law will only work if it has a deterrent effect -- revoking a person's license won't achieve anything if the person was never going to drive drunk again. If instead most people drive sober, and a few people drive drunk on a daily basis and cause accidents all the time, then revoking licenses will work by getting habitual accident-causers off the road. The argument is assuming the law will achieve one of those two objectives, but we can't easily tell which one, and answers resembling A and B could be right depending on how the law will work. Overall it's not a very precisely constructed question, so it's not easy to really say what answer is best, though I'd pick C if forced to choose.