Title
Authorizing the joint Committees on Education and Law and Government to conduct public hearings to examine the low voter turnout in primary and general elections in the City of Philadelphia.
Body
WHEREAS, The City of Philadelphia was the birthplace of American democracy; and
WHEREAS, Participation in self-government through involvement in the democratic process is foundational to American society; and
WHEREAS, Voting in elections is the most direct and essential form of civic participation; and
WHEREAS, The rate of voter participation decreased between 1963 and 2011 by 52%: from around 75% of registered voters in 1963, to around 65% in 1975, to around 62% in 1983, to around 61% in 1991, to around 50 in 2003, to around 30 in 2007, and finally to around 21% of registered voters in 2011; and
WHEREAS, Only around 27% of registered voters participated in the 2015 Philadelphia mayoral primary election; and
WHEREAS, Millennials (defined as those between the ages of 18 and 34), although comprising the largest age group among registered voters, had a turnout of only 12% in the 2015 Philadelphia primary election; and
WHEREAS, The largest percentage of turnout by age demographic (among those aged 65+) remained under 50% of registered voters in the 2015 Philadelphia primary election; and
WHEREAS, Voter turnout rates in other large cities, including Los Angeles, New York City, and Chicago, has also decreased substantially over the past 50 years; and
WHEREAS, 144 United States cities averaged a turnout rate of less than 21% in the year 2011; and
WHEREAS, Nationally, until the late 1960s, formal civic education often comprised up to three courses, usually civics, democracy and government, in addition to U.S. history. A recent study, "The Civic Mission of Schools," revealed a continuing trend throughout the 1970s, '80s and '90s to condense those civic education courses into a single course.
WHEREAS, The City of Philadelphia has an intere...
Click here for full text