American University

30/07/2024 | News release | Distributed by Public on 30/07/2024 22:06

Dialogue for Democracy

In today's political landscape, the gulf between Democrats and Republicans has never felt wider.

Americans hold deeply negative views of those across the aisle, with more than 8 in 10 expressing the belief that "Republicans and Democrats are more focused on fighting each other than on solving problems," according to the Pew Research Center.

But on July 22, during an event sponsored by the Sine Institute of Policy and Politics, young leaders from both parties cut through that noise and engaged with each other about what unites-not divides-Generation Z.

"We're coming to a point in our country where we're often seeing our political opponents as our enemies. Our opponents are just that-they're our opponents," said Courtney Hope Britt, national chair of the College Republican National Committee. "They are not our enemies. . . . At the end of the day, the Democrats are not rooting for the demise of our nation. They just have a different way of getting to a lot of the same visions that I have. We want a lot of the same things. We simply disagree about how to get there."

Britt was joined by Carolyn Salvador Avila, national president of the College Democrats of America. The important conversation modeling civil dialogue occurred nine days after the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump and just two days after President Joe Biden announced he would no longer seek reelection.

"I can't think of a more important year or time that [this event came] together," said Amy Dacey, SPA/MA '95, executive director of the Sine Institute. "July has felt like a very long year. So much is happening in the political environment."

The event was also the first official campus gathering attended by President Jon Alger, a national leader in the field of civic engagement in higher education, who joined AU on July 1. Alger was accompanied in the front row by his wife, Mary Ann. Trustee Jeff Sine, SIS/BA '76, who, along with wife Samira, made the $10 million milestone gift to launch the institute, also attended the event, along with national and local reporters and more than 50 AU community members. Another 300 people tuned in online.

Britt and Avila gave voice to the divided state of politics and the commonalities that matter most to a diverse voting block of 41 million Americans, aged 18-27, who are key to the outcome of the 2024 presidential election. Those shared concerns include college affordability, the economy, and affordable housing-all of which were among the issues identified in the Sine Institute's 2023 survey of voters aged 18-34.

The pair also found agreement on protecting the environment, which Avila said will make it easier to develop creative solutions to address climate change.

"Gen Z as a whole is worried about what the environment is going to look like going forward," she said. "This is a great place where we can come together as a generation to get more involved in politics and find solutions to get us out of the hole that we've dug ourselves into."

"Climate change is something that we're really concerned about as well as Gen Z Republicans," Britt added. "I know that's maybe a shift from some older-guard Republicans. We're excited about the way free market solutions can address environmental problems."

Avila and Britt said that continuing to have conversations with people with whom they disagree is just as important to democracy as voting and running for office.

"I can have my own beliefs, but if I encounter somebody that doesn't agree with [me], then I should probably start to look into exactly why they believe what they believe and why they think what they think," Avila said. "Challenging myself to do that in every single instance where I've come across somebody who doesn't agree with me has only made these conversations easier.

"I'm hoping after this event, maybe more people will be willing to have these conversations in a gracious and respectable manner."

Watch the full event on the Sine Institute's YouTube page.