Broadcasting for Democracy: Reimagining Official-Citizen Communication

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Abstract

Digital technology has fundamentally transformed civic dialogue, presenting both unprecedented opportunities for connection and significant challenges to democratic integrity. The pervasive reliance on commercial social media platforms for political communication, while offering broad reach, has enabled environments that actively promote algorithmic bias, accelerate misinformation, and leave users vulnerable to impersonation and identity theft. I argue that these issues pose a significant threat by eroding public trust and fragmenting the essential dialogue between elected officials and the citizens they serve. I propose a novel approach: a dedicated, government-backed digital platform providing every elected official with an individual, officially verified channel for concise, primarily one-way, text-based updates, designed to be an authoritative broadcast channel supplemented by separate mechanisms for structured citizen feedback. This system aims to circumvent the pitfalls of commercial platforms, offering a transparent and authoritative source of information that is easily searchable, fosters greater accountability, and offers robust protection against impersonation and identity theft, thereby strengthening the essential connection between representatives and the represented.

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