Article

Elections are the defining feature of modern democracy. They are the process by which we express a desired future en masse. It is the mass dimension that matters most; it is the mass dimension that is receding.

One in every two adults living in this country voted at the 2024 general election. This is the lowest share of the population to vote since universal suffrage.

The 'turnout gap' has also widened – turnout was very unequal. While inequality across age and income groups has stayed roughly constant across the most recent general elections, the turnout gap between graduates and non-graduates has doubled since the 2019 election and grown by a quarter between renters and owners since the 2017 election.

The only solution to the heightening doom loop of voting patterns, skewed policy and populist politics is democratic reform. This report focusses on an important and actionable part of that: elections. We put forward policy approaches to improve turnout and reduce inequality at UK general elections.