@BrookingsInstitution
  @BrookingsInstitution
Brookings Institution | Does my vote really matter? @BrookingsInstitution | Uploaded September 2024 | Updated October 2024, 1 hour ago.
While voter turnout rates for voters 18 to 29 have been trending up, younger voters continue to have the lowest turnout of all age groups. Younger voters offer many explanations for not participating in elections—they are rigged, politicians don’t follow through on promises, voting itself is confusing or difficult to assess, and ultimately, their vote doesn’t matter. In this episode, host Katie Dunn Tenpas discusses why and how your vote matters with Keesha Middlemass, a fellow and associate professor of American politics and public policy at Howard University, and how public education can help recenter a culture of democracy with Senior Fellow Jon Valant, director of the Brown Center on Education Policy.

Subscribe! youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=BrookingsInstitution

Follow Brookings on social media!
Facebook: Facebook.com/Brookings
Twitter: twitter.com/BrookingsInst
Instagram: Instagram.com/brookingsinst
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/com/company/the-brookings-institution
Does my vote really matter?The international aid architectureWhy the climate crisis is a generational opportunity for AfricaThe 2024 US presidential election and the future of multilateralismHow can markets better value nature and price the benefits of conservation?Did behavioral changes reduce COVID-19 deaths?Fentanyl’s impact on Native American communities and paths to recoveryInnovation is part of rural America’s DNA (part 2)Concurrent Session A: State and Local Tax Issues

Does my vote really matter? @BrookingsInstitution

SHARE TO X SHARE TO REDDIT SHARE TO FACEBOOK WALLPAPER