By Jonathan D. Cohen, Joan and Irwin Jacobs Program Officer for American Institutions, Society, and the Public Good at the Ƶ, and Abhishek Raman, Program Officer for American Institutions, Society, and the Public Good at the Ƶ
Young Americans believe that our democracy is in trouble. Amid years of chaos in Washington, D.C., the fallout from the 2020 election, and stalled progress on legislation ranging from climate change to voting rights, it is unsurprising that Americans between the ages of eighteen and twenty-nine are worried about the state of American democracy. Ahead of the White House’s December 2021 Summit for Democracy and as part of its ongoing efforts to advance the recommendations in Our Common Purpose: Reinventing American Democracy for the 21st Century, the Ƶ organized two initiatives last fall aimed at young people: a national polling project and a summit of young leaders, who were brought together for their expertise, vision, and commitment to making progress on critical issues in their communities.
Voices of the Future
The Ƶ sought to understand better how members of the eighteen-to-twenty-nine-year-old cohort perceive American democracy and how they respond to different proposals to strengthen American democracy for the twenty-first century. A nationally representative deliberative poll, co-organized by the Ƶ, found that 40 percent of young people in the United States do not think American democracy works well. Sixty-nine percent believe government policies “represent the voices of the wealthy and powerful,” and 54 percent agree that “people like me don’t have any say about what the government does.”
These results are drawn from Voices of the Future, a nationally representative deliberative poll led by students from Marquette University, Slippery Rock University, Stanford University, and Yale University with guidance from the Ƶ and the Center for Deliberative Democracy and the Haas Center for Public Service at Stanford University.
Voices of the Future captured responses on issues concerning American democracy via an initial survey of 1,046 Americans ages eighteen to twenty-nine from October 15–November 4, 2021, a deliberative event on November 6, 2021, and a follow-up survey.
From the results of the poll, there is widespread agreement about the importance of core democratic values among this age cohort. Some of the findings include:
- 75 percent of respondents–including 81 percent of young Democrats and 73 percent of young Republicans–felt that overcoming current divisions in American society is important.
- 82 percent support respecting people’s rights and freedoms, 70 percent believe in ensuring freedom of speech, and 80 percent support guaranteeing that everyone who wants to vote can do so.
- 73 percent of young Democrats and 51 percent of young Republicans agree that social media companies should be regulated, especially on issues related to individual data privacy.
As part of the polling process, the participants engaged in group deliberations on several topics related to democracy, such as social media, civic responsibility, and representation. They also discussed specific recommendations in the Our Common Purpose report, including national service, ranked choice voting, voting rights, and campaign finance reform. Through this process, young adults’ understanding of American democracy and their support for measures to strengthen it increased across some measures. For example, their support for the creation of a publicly funded or nonprofit social media platform increased. And support for using a Ranked Choice Voting (RCV) system in presidential elections in which voters rank candidates by preference saw a significant uptick from 49 to 62 percent.
Going forward, the Ƶ’s Our Common Purpose implementation team will use the quantitative survey data and the qualitative information from the deliberative event to illuminate the priorities and perspectives of younger Americans to inform its work to protect and strengthen American constitutional democracy.
Summit: Youth Agenda for American Democracy
With the deliberative polling data as a guide, the Ƶ hosted the Youth Agenda for American Democracy summit in partnership with Washington University in St. Louis on November 12, 2021. The goal of the convening was to help participants in the international White House Summit for Democracy understand how young leaders perceive the challenges facing the political system they have inherited, and what they see as the clearest path to reinvent American democracy for the twenty-first century.
Fifty leaders, between the ages of eighteen and twenty-nine, representing twenty-four states and a broad cross-section of expertise and experiences, joined Justin Levitt, White House Senior Policy Advisor for Democracy and Voting Rights, at the summit. The participants were selected from more than 130 nominees and were chosen for their demonstrated leadership experience, outstanding records of civic engagement, and commitment to cross-partisan dialogue. These young leaders work on a variety of issues – climate change, racial justice, and immigration, among other topics – but they share an understanding that progress on the great challenges of our time requires a healthy political system and a functioning representative democracy.
The summit participants highlighted numerous ways in which the current state of American democracy impedes on their work. Three of their concerns include:
- Unresponsive institutions and indifferent officials have led to a widespread sense of disengagement and disempowerment among their peers.
- The current system of self-government does not provide equal voice and representation to all Americans.
- Social media exacerbates the challenges facing our constitutional democracy.
The participants at the summit did more than criticize the current state of American democracy. They articulated their own affirmative agenda for strengthening our constitutional system by identifying several achievable solutions:
- Better connect people to their government officials and to each other;
- Expand access to voting so that everyone who wants to vote can do so;
- Ensure every American has a baseline understanding of civics;
- Reduce the influence of money in politics;
- Bring new people into the democratic process;
- Combat mis- or disinformation and information bubbles; and
- Promote media literacy.
These priorities are already informing democracy efforts in Washington. The White House is currently engaged in a Year of Action on democracy reform, and the agenda articulated by the participants in the Ƶ’s Youth Summit helped inform the commitments made by the United States toward global democratic renewal during the White House Summit for Democracy.
Two participants from the Youth Summit, Andrew Brennan and Bobbi Taylor, were invited to represent the United States at the Global Youth Townhall portion of the White House Summit. For Brennan and Taylor, a takeaway from the global townhall was that young people have a particular responsibility to secure the future of democracy not only in their own countries but around the world. Recalling his experience at the townhall, Brennan reflected that “with information accessible at their fingertips, young people do not need to wait until they are elected officials to hold their leaders accountable and ensure that democratic principles are preserved for future generations.”
Young Americans are worried about the state of their democracy, but they are eager to get involved to help fix it. The Ƶ is committed to continuing to engage this community of emerging leaders and to building a national network of young Americans eager for democratic renewal.
To learn more about the Ƶ’s efforts to advance the recommendations in Our Common Purpose, please visit www.amacad.org/ourcommonpurpose.