Democracy of the Future

Democracy of the Future

Today, democracies around the world are under increased national and international pressure. Trust in democratic actors and institutions is declining, while right-wing populist movements and authoritarianism are on the rise. This is shifting political discourse to the right and threatening democratic values.

The Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung is committed to fostering democracy, the rule of law, equality, and civic education. We want to enhance the involvement of civil society expertise in political decision-making and open up more opportunities for direct participation in the political process. Political advice and British-German dialogues are key instruments in our promotion of democracy.

Discussions around democracy are an integral part of FES UK’s work. In recent years, we have worked on projects on citizens’ assemblies, the (non-)representation of certain social groups in Parliament, and tackling the right-wing populist push to retrovert gender relations.

In our efforts to strengthen and sustain democracy, we also work closely with our Democracy of the Future office in Vienna. Together, we seek democratic solutions to the social problems faced by the UK.

Latest Events

| Democracy of the Future | Event

Together with the UCL Policy Lab we launched our joint snap-analysis of the election (see below). With guests and experts from the UK and Germany, we…


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Tuesday, 22.10.2024 | Democracy of the Future | Event

On the afternoon of Tuesday 22nd October 2024, the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung London office co-hosted an exchange in Portcullis House with Phil Brickell…


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18.06.2024 | Work, Economy & the Just Transition, Democracy of the Future | Event

NASUWT the Teachers’ Union, the GEW, and the Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung UK office are undertaking a joint project to explore the impact of the increase…


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Related Publications

The Centre's Last Chance? Lessons from the 2025 German Election

We live at a time when almost every election in a major democracy is a momentous one. A time when the liberal global order, the welfare state, economy and even the very foundations of liberal democracy itself often seem to be on the ballot paper.

The Centre’s Last Chance? Lessons from the 2025 German Election

The inflation and cost of living crises that COVID-19 let rip was further entrenched by Russia’s horrific invasion of Ukraine and almost everywhere governments failed to convince voters that they had solutions to the problems they faced. For all of Scholz’s pre-election talk of reinventing government to solve the problems that we all collectively face, millions of voters thought instead that they witnessed a government paralyzed by permanent infighting and the continual misfunctioning of the state machine. For all of the talk of “respecting” working people once again, instead the gnawing sense that the political elite live within their own bubble protected from the tribulations that befall ordinary people returned with a vengeance. This was the backdrop both to the Social Democrats rapid electoral decline and to the rise of the extremes, most notably on the right but also on the left. The results were not as decisive as they might have been, although the SPD has suffered the worst electoral defeat in its more than one and half centuries’ history. They were certainly an indication that patience is rapidly running out. For the centre to continue to hold, radical promises have to be delivered on, however difficult that is to do, either politically or economically. If they are not, then the old assumptions about the power of the centre ground in European politics will look very flimsy indeed.

It is for those reasons that the world’s attention was focused more on the German general election even more than it usually is.

So much has changed since the last time the vote was held back in 2021. At that moment, it was plausible to believe that social democracy was making a return. Many believed that the era of populism and extremism was dying. As the world edged out of a pandemic, the theory went that as people had depended on both scientific expertise and on government action to keep them safe, so they would turn to the “grown-ups” of politics once more and to those who prioritised the welfare of the majority. Joe Biden won the presidential election in the United States. Anthony Albanese brought the Australian Labor Party back to power in Australia and Olaf Scholz led the SPD to a historic return to the Chancellor’s Office, all with strikingly similar campaign messages and a promise to return some semblance of order to the world. Of course, we now know that this moment would not last.

Read the full report here.

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