Between apathy and hope – your chance to give yourself something to vote for!

More than 60% of 18-24 year olds do not vote and the number of young people voting has not reached the threshold of 50% for the past 25 years.

youth-vote

Peter Lesniak is the director of communications at Bite the Ballot

George Jean Nathan said a hundred years ago that ‘bad officials are elected by good citizens who do not vote’.

This statement is as true today as it was back then.

This is a call to action. For all those young potential voters, for those who feel disengaged with politics and democracy, for those apathetic to political challenges but also those highly involved and playing a role in their communities and society as a whole.

These are the facts: More than three-fifths of 18-24 year olds do not vote and the number of young people voting has not reached the threshold of 50% for the past 25 years.

This means more than 2.5 million young people have not had their say for over quarter of the century. Why, you ask yourself?

From a young person’s perspective our democratic institutions often have nothing to offer them. Firstly, there seems to be no response to their voices, even if they try to reach out. Tuition fees protests and riots demonstrated total lack of trust in our democratic system, or rather in the decision-making process.

Secondly, younger generations are not being taught the very basics of how to engage in the political process. There is a fundamental lack of practical knowledge about our democracy among young people coming out of education.

Thirdly, and most importantly, there was no platform of engagement and communication between young people and politics. Until now…

Having built the foundations of a nationwide grassroots network and having gained support from all major political parties, the Bite the Ballot campaign will use this to create a unique and genuinely youth-led political manifesto to give young people the chance to put across their views to policy-makers in government for the first time.

 


See also:

It’s all about turnout 24 Apr 2012

The grey ghosts of election ’92 could return unless voter registration is stepped up 15 Apr 2012

Clegg under fire over voter registration, party funding and youth unemployment 15 Nov 2011

The coalition are conspiring to lock the left out of the electoral process 23 Oct 2011

Harman: Lib Dems “colluding” with Tories to deny millions the vote 29 Sep 2011


 

With the official support from the manifesto-writers, the ‘My Manifesto’ project will help to bring about a revolutionary change in the way politicians perceive young people’s views but, most importantly, it will also give us, young people, something to vote for.

Here are three simple steps to contribute to the youth manifesto: 1) Watch the video; 2) Complete our survey; 3) Make a change!

This is a chance for each and every one of us to make our voices heard. Let us challenge the common misconceptions and project our views and concerns to those in positions of power and influence.

Show them that the silent generation, a vote-not-worth-winning, is not silent anymore. Make them take into account our perceptions, problems, ideas and suggestions and let the millions of young people across the country become a strong voice in the society.

I’ve had my say – now will you have yours?

40 Responses to “Between apathy and hope – your chance to give yourself something to vote for!”

  1. afsaca.robin

    Is Democracy Worth Defending? Danielle Obono Front de Gauche

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GI3Y6I9sJyk

  2. afsaca.robin

    Kate Hudson CND – Coalition of Resistance National Organising Conference 27.11.10

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZoF0lQSnENs

  3. father ted

    I think Respect could become the new party of the left. New Labour seems to be a busted flush. Even the fruitcakes that run this blog need reminding of their deeply held beliefs (re: paying interns).

  4. stew

    it would be nice to have a real alternative argued for. there must be millions out there who traditionally vote Labour who don’t really agree with its values.

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