Making Democracy Work > Roosevelt Home > Roosevelt Challenges > Making Democracy Work
Submit policy pieces for the 25 Ideas Series addressing this challenge to submissions@rooseveltinstitution.org. Submission guidelines can be found here. The sooner you submit policy ideas, the more time you'll have to work with the editing team which increases your chances of being published.
Come to Roosevelt's first policy conference of 2008 in Chicago. Help us move "Towards a New Progressive Citizenship" Contact your challenge coordinator for other available incentives such as travel to conferences, the Policy Expo, etc.
  
To join this group and begin working on the challenge, click "Participate," "Request to Join." (You must be logged in to do this.) If you would like more information about the Challenge, email Coordinator Matthew Segal.
The Challenge: restore government of the people, by the people, and for the people in America.
The United States rest upon the idea of representation. We select our leaders because if we didn't, our government wouldn't reflect our values. Today, millions of Americans don't vote because their vote isn't reflected in policy, and their values are misrepresented. And when some of us are misrepresented, all of us are misrepresented. When barriers stand in the way of American voters, barriers stand in the way of truly "public" policy. When the electoral process is imprecise, the government is imprecise. Before we can effect real change, we must make our votes count. The Roosevelt Institution seeks the ideas of citizens to accomplish just that.
Voting is the cornerstone of democracy, the means for a representative government, the voice of the people, and mode for political, social, and economic expression. President Lyndon B. Johnson declared the vote “the most powerful instrument ever devised by man for breaking down injustice and destroying the terrible walls which imprison men because they are different from other men." U.S. Senator Margaret Chase Smith put it more bluntly: “freedom unexercised may become freedom forfeited.” Given its sacred and imperative nature however, the following facts seem paradoxical: in a list of countries tabulated by the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance, the United States ranks 139th in voter turnout percentage, far behind nations that lack such basics as paved roads and running water. According to the U.S census, national voter turnout has averaged approximately fifty-four percent in the past three presidential elections. And most disturbingly, according to the Center for Information and Research on Civic Learning and Engagement, only 25 percent of young citizens (ages 18-29) voted in the 2006 Midterm Election.
The least participatory demographic, youth (citizens ages 18-29) are the future—not just as decision makers—but as consumers, benefactors, entrepreneurs, inventors, educators, and leaders. The youth of today are uniquely positioned to make vital decisions in an age of technology and globalization, as well one of international terrorism and global warming. Unlike prior generations, the participation and decision-making of this current one will therefore considerably, if not inevitably, affect the entire world. With such colossal responsibility, it is essential to ensure a largely engaged populous, and to thereby take steps at institutionalizing voter participation within our education and cultural systems. By joining this challenge you can seek to do the following...
Potential avenues for further exploration
Please email Matthew.Segal@rooseveltinstitution.org if you are interested joining a select round table of student experts and media spokespeople for this challenge.
 
  

Group members: Matthew Segal Norm Kaufmann Jaclyn E Allen Laurie Anne Hughes T Au Jonathan L Backer Elana Baurer Charles Bittermann Nick R Bradley Bobby Campbell Blake M Carpenter Emmanuel Caudillo Gracye Y Cheng Brenden Cline Bryce G Colquitt Kirti Datla Tony T Dong Natalie C Doss Eva H DuGoff Tarsi V Dunlop Andrew Feldman Matthew D Fischler Hallie B Fox Julie Geng Emily Grieves Stephanie A Gross Adrian D Haimovich Ata R Hindi Chris R Holdgraf Caitlin N Howarth Jared Irmas Isabella Jacoby Arthur Kaneko Rakiba Kibria Colin A Koffel Sylvia Lee Mark H Madsen Zach Marks Cloie E McClellan Alyssa A Meyer Vrutika A Mody Elizabeth L Norris William A Organek Jonathan Pichot Katie Ranney JJ Raynor David W Richardson Ernesto Rodriguez Linda S Rosen Kali J Rubaii Kali Rubaii Matthew R Samson Nicholas R Santos Mike Simmons William L Slack Louie Sloven Eric Smith Stephanie A Somerman Laura Temel Brad Tidwell Rebecca L Yarbrough
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