The four nervous eighth-graders set up two large display boards decorated with American flag bouquets on Sen. Sandy Pappas' desk. The John Glenn Middle School students were at the Minnesota State Capitol one recent Friday morning to propose a constitutional amendment lowering the voting age to 16.
"We think 16 is the appropriate age to vote because people have, um. ... " Haley Husom, 13, paused to find the most appropriate word.
"Intellectual capacity?" said Pappas, DFL-St. Paul, filling in the blank with a laugh. Pappas introduced a bill in 2007 to lower the voting age in school district elections to 16, but it never received a hearing. She has also supported lowering the voting age in state and national elections.
"We want to lower the voting age and we want to educate kids better so they will know about the candidates and hopefully make the country a better place," said Sarah Jorgenson, 14, of John Glenn in Maplewood.
The voting-age project is part of the national nonprofit Project Citizen, which encourages youth involvement in state and local government. About 100 schools across Minnesota participated in the program this year, which culminated in a showcase Wednesday at the Capitol. Each student group presented projects to a panel of judges.
This is not the first time students have proposed legislation. Earlier this year, 16-year-old Joe Gibson, a Blooming Prairie High School sophomore, helped lower the blood donation age from 17 to 16, after he was turned away from giving blood.
Also this year, Minnetonka Middle School East sixth-graders Brendan Broviak and Hannah Ehresmann, both 11, testified during a Senate committee to make ice hockey Minnesota's state sport. The students collected 600 signatures supporting the proposal. Other notable laws proposed by students include the naming of the Honeycrisp apple as the state fruit in 2006 and the blueberry muffin as the state muffin in 1988.
The John Glenn students told Pappas that they had polled their peers and found that most middle school students said they did not feel involved in the political process and would vote in an election if given the chance.