voting
Imagine Living in a Country Where Voting Is Mandatory
In Australia, election days are a party, and everyone’s invited.
By Louise Scarce
Can Social Media Companies Actually Get People to Vote?
Snapchat and Facebook talk a big game around voting, but do their registration efforts actually work?
By Elizabeth Djinis
Summer Lee Thinks Young People Are the Democrats’ ‘Moral Compass’
“The power of the people is always stronger than the people in power.”
By Teen Vogue Staff
What It’s Like to Live In a State Run By Politicians You Can’t Stand
“At first, there was this huge urge to just get away and get out.”
By Elizabeth Djinis
Why Everyone Is Watching This Texas Congressional Race
Jessica Cisneros, a young, forward-thinking Tejana, wants to shake up Texas politics.
By Gaby Del VallePhotography by Sarah Karlan
If Politicians Want Our Vote, They Need to Forgive Student Debt
43 million Americans owe a total of more than $1.59 trillion.
By Maggie BellPhotography by Rosie Brock
10 Questions for North Carolina Congressional Candidate Nida Allam
She could become the youngest woman ever elected to Congress!
By Teen Vogue Staff
This Book Is Like SparkNotes for Current Events
You can’t change the world unless you understand it.
By Olivia Seltzer
Are Republicans Self-Owning With Their Approach to Young Voters?
Republicans may be setting themselves up for trouble in years to come.
By Lauren Young
Stop Using My Grandpa’s Words While Betraying His Legacy
Yolanda Renee King, MLK’s granddaughter, wants lawmakers to act on voting rights.
By Yolanda Renee King
Democrats Need to Do More Than Just Not Be Republicans
The Virginia elections offer the latest evidence of that.
By Lex McMenamin
Storm Reid Goes Schoolhouse Rock in Video on How Bills Become Law
“I’m just a bill,” Gen Z edition.
By Lex McMenamin
Yolanda King, 13, Has a Message for Congress on Voting Rights
MLK’s granddaughter is “disgusted” by officials in D.C.
By Yolanda Renee King
Elizabeth Warren Wants Congress to Do Its Job
The senator tells Teen Vogue it's time to get over the bipartisanship fantasy.
By Lauren Young