Host:
Roshan Bliss, National Coalition for Dialogue and Liberation
Who’s in the room?
- Caitlin Tapia
- Michelle Faust Raghavan, Claridad Media
- Gene Sonn, Resolve Philly
- Linda Shaw, Solutions Journalism Network
- Nation Hahn, EdNC
- Megan Garvey, LAist
- Allison Dikanovic, Kansas City Star
- Chelsea Naughton, America Amplified
- Meredith Edlow, photographer
- David Bornstein, Solutions Journalism Network
- Frank, professor observing
These other things that are about democracy beyond elections exist, but people don’t know about them, examples:
- Participatory budgeting
How do we use journalism to engage folks in conversations and decisions that impact them beyond going to the ballot on Election Day?
Linda:
- Research that horse race coverage leads people to lose trust in political and journalism institutions
- Start with community listening
- Use the citizen’s agenda approach
- What are the issues you want politicians to be solving?
- Use solutions journalism to cover those issues
Megan:
- LAist has done a lot of work listening to community and figuring out where people are at when it comes to participating in democracy
- Human voter guide — People didn’t know how to vote, how to get a ballot, what each of the roles do
- If you don’t know how to get the ballot, the rest is moot
- Civics and democracy reporter → instead of politics reporter
- LA has a new mayor
- Used influencers and other strategies to get a demographically representative survey response from voters about issues of importance
- Main story that has come out so far: promise tracker
- Identified main points of the new mayor’s policy for reducing the homelessness crisis and tracked success
- We’re able to hold her to account on each point regularly
- Promise Tracker takeaways
- City data is terrible
- A written story
- “Meet Your Mayor” type quiz/guide
What people say they want/what’s good for our democracy vs. what people actually engage with?
Chelsea:
- Platforms: people aren’t their best selves on social media
- Zombie mode, outrage motivates people
- The platforms we put information on are set up to get people to behave that way
- We have an obligation to figure out another way to deliver that information
Megan:
- Planet Money TikTok
- Providing information in a more interesting/creative way
Chelsea:
- You’re not hosting the dinner party
- You’re providing a dish at the dinner party
- You’re not showing up in the space in a way that people care about
Caitlin:
- Statements that fuel policies and decisions vs. seeking a platform and coverage
- Where is the journalism line between paparazzi and those who are implementing policies and decisions that affect people’s lives
Gene:
- Documenters expansion
- Active participation → more than 200 people who were signed up for training
- Hunger to be involved in democracy beyond elections
- Meetings that are supposed to include the public have become prohibitively restrictive
Roshan:
- Journalists collaborating with professional facilitators to engage around an issue at hand in the community along the lines of reality TV covering the deliberative process
Megan:
- “Make Al Care”
- LA is infamous for having very low turnouts for elections
- Al was a cafe owner who had never voted
- He didn’t see the point or how it could connect to his life
- What would it take to get Al to vote?
- Politicians came and started pitching to Al
- Reporter drove him to the polls
- Covered 2000 campaign following Dick Cheney and Ralph Nader
- Nader had said Bush and Gore were basically the same
- People’s lives aren’t all that different depending on who is in office
Peggy:
- Robert Putnam’s research — bowling alone
- Civic institutions where people come together
- Decline of civic institutions tracks with decline of participation in democracy
- The more that people see the ways they can engage, the more they will
Nation:
- Community college students
- Surveyed with Reach
- Created candidate survey based on students’ questions
- Brought them to the candidates
- Hosted a forum to create videos for social media and also a digital guide
- The community colleges distributed the survey
- EdNC gave the data back to the colleges
- Teacher survey, partnered with Dept. of Public Instruction
- Promise: EdNC would include the survey results in the DPI report
- Creating meaningful ways for people engage in ways that can actually affect policy
Megan:
- Voter guides start with the responsibilities of what officials do
David:
- Most Americans don’t know what the government does
- Department of energy
- Inflation and infrastructure act — Biggest public expenditure since the new deal, should be talked about but people don’t know what it is
- We don’t understand or cover what problem solving looks like in the government
- How do we cover government day by day to show what they actually do that affects our lives
- The brand of government has been destroyed by journalism
Peter Block:
- Conversation about democracy is about self-governance
- Our attention on elections gets in the way of our coverage of democracy
- What are you doing to keep your neighborhood safe?
Chelsea:
- Series about democracy from the ground up
- Focused on people who were doing the work of democracy outside of politics and government
- Profiles of people and portraits of what else is democracy
- Think more broadly about what democracy is, put it in different beats
Meredith:
- For Black people, there is a very thin line between democracy and slavery
- Has bred this culture of hierarchy
- Has bred this culture of disseminating your information to a certain subset of people
- We talk past the reality of if we don’t have democracy, some people would be enslaved
- “My position of the world outside of democracy is slavery.”
- Until we get comfortable talking about slavery and what that means to the United States
- Knew so little about the history of her family’s experience in Virginia
- Was confused about the origin of her name, went on a personal search
- If we don’t start talking more about slavery and the sanitation of history after the Civil War, I’m not sure we’re having the best conversation about democracy
- In churches in Virginia, a lot of white rightwing conservative ideas and politics mix with Black people who vote Democrat but also have conservative religious views
Megan:
- We are an ahistorical country that wants to forget.
- It’s easy to forget that the electoral college exists because of slavery, the rules that keep people from distributing water at the polls is to keep people from voting.
- We need reporting that offers historical context.
David:
- The message to get people to dismiss/disengage with democracy is that “democracy doesn’t deliver”
- Journalism doesn’t cover how democracy delivers
- “We can’t be an advocate for the government”
Peter Block:
- What is the other conversation we can be having other than investigative?
Chelsea:
- “Traveling While Black” exhibit
- Oral histories in a VR headset
- At a restaurant in the Green Book, riding around in a bus
- The immersive experience brought you into the space
- Allocating resources to powerful VR experiences can be really important
- We forget that the way we present our stories can have such a huge impact
Gene:
- The plane landing safely isn’t a journalism story
- If the pattern of planes landing safely is going up, that is a story
- Grew up attending a public forum in a school gymnasium, the physical representation of democracy was powerful
David:
- Documentary about election workers called no time to fail
Nation:
- People think about their lives first, and their civics and community second
- If you can directly show people that their voices will be heard
- Philanthropy: Survey to inform grantmaking
Megan:
- We can cover democratic systems
- Who has power and why and how to create greater access
- Making streams available
David:
- Budgets tell you how power is operating in a town
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