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A Progressive Group Rolls Out a Campus Competitor to Turning Point

April 15, 2026
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A Progressive Group Rolls Out a Campus Competitor to Turning Point

Democrats desperate to win back young voters who drifted rightward in the 2024 election have rolled out a host of projects since then aimed at appealing to Gen Z.

The latest high-profile group to join in: More Perfect Union, the progressive media organization run by a veteran of Senator Bernie Sanders’s presidential campaigns.

On Wednesday, More Perfect Union announced an initiative called More Perfect University, a college campus effort pitched as a liberal antidote to Turning Point USA, the conservative activist group that has spread right-wing cultural values at universities and mobilized young voters for President Trump.

“They’ve been wildly successful,” Faiz Shakir, the executive director of More Perfect Union and a senior adviser to Mr. Sanders, said of the right. “We’re hoping that an economic populist movement for the next generation will start through More Perfect Union on campuses.”

The stakes are high on college campuses, where younger voters joined a historic shift of traditionally Democratic groups toward Mr. Trump in 2024.

Young voters backed former Vice President Kamala Harris over Mr. Trump, 51 percent to 47 percent. But that result represented a significant shift from the 25-point margin by which they backed former President Joseph R. Biden Jr. in 2020, according to an analysis of Associated Press VoteCast data.

The world of higher education has long been seen as a bastion of liberalism, and that view helped Turning Point pitch itself as countercultural alternative when it emerged more than a decade ago.

But if Turning Point was the right’s answer to the left’s dominance of academia, More Perfect University will frame itself as a progressive champion for the working class, said Elise Joshi, a former executive director of Gen-Z for Change who will lead the push.

“The same corporations that are rigging the economy against young people are bankrolling the right’s campus operation,” Ms. Joshi said. The evidence, she added, lies in Turning Point’s “refusal to champion working-class issues.”

The goal will be not only to organize on campus but also to train and promote an army of young, lefty content creators — and then turn them into media influencers.

Ms. Joshi suggested that More Perfect University was an answer to the collapse of “both local and campus journalism.”

“We’re building a national network of student storytellers,” she said, adding that they would be students who “understand our economy is not broken by accident.”

The new initiative is buoyed by More Perfect Union’s pre-existing online presence: It reaches about 50 million people each month, the group said, and 10 percent of its audience is 25 years old or younger.

“Hopefully, we become the largest left-of-center campus organization,” Mr. Shakir said.

The group will have an important early backer: Mr. Sanders plans to join an inaugural event that will be livestreamed on YouTube next week. Soon after, the group will feature Lina Khan, the former chairwoman of the Federal Trade Commission and a crusader against Big Tech monopolies.

The initiative will have three components: in-person events on college campuses, including podcast tapings and debates; a digital presence hosted on the social media app Discord, where students from various campuses can connect; and a content-creation program focused on issues like labor strikes, economic insecurity and free speech. The program will focus on public schools and those with a high percentage of working-class students, the group said.

More Perfect University is one of many efforts Democrats are making to recapture young voters who swung toward Mr. Trump in 2024, spurred by his promises to fix an economy that many viewed as stacked against them. Young men were especially swayed, as Mr. Trump made appeals rooted in nostalgia for traditional family life.

Many young people now say that Mr. Trump has failed to deliver, opening the door for Democrats. Various wings of the party have launched efforts aimed at better understanding Gen Z voters. Those include the Speaking with American Men research project; the “Pulse Check” campaign from NextGen America, which asks young people in informal text conversations about their top issues; and National Ground Game, which also bills itself as a contrast to Turning Point.

For a fledgling group like More Perfect University, convincing young people to pay attention in a nonpresidential year may be challenging. The group’s goal is lofty: emerging as the chief alternative to Turning Point, which succeeded by building a brand rooted not just in political organizing but also in cultural appeals, such as a return to traditional marriages.

Mr. Shakir said his group was up to the task, especially because More Perfect Union is not affiliated with Democratics and instead pushes for economic policies that could appeal to disillusioned young people.

He said More Perfect University was positioned to build a new generation of influential progressive voices, similar to how Turning Point supercharged the careers of conservative icons, including Candace Owens.

“I assume, if we’re very successful here, you look at us in a year or two years, you say, ‘Whoa, those economic populist voices who are compelling and interesting first came out of’” More Perfect Union, he said.

Kellen Browning is a Times political reporter based in San Francisco.

The post A Progressive Group Rolls Out a Campus Competitor to Turning Point appeared first on New York Times.

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