NEWLY RELEASED

Democracy’s Second Act book cover – Why Politics Needs the Public by Peter MacLeod and Richard Johnson

Cynicism is rising, trust is eroding, and politics feels hopelessly stuck. Yet look closer and you can see a quiet revolution already underway — from Ireland’s Citizens’ Assemblies to Canada’s approach to settling refugees, from Oregonians fighting misinformation at the ballot box to the Dutch genius for holding back the sea.

In Democracy’s Second Act, Peter MacLeod and Richard Johnson argue that democracy’s First Act — anchored in voting rights and representative government — achieved extraordinary gains. Free elections, near-universal suffrage, and the peaceful transfer of power reshaped societies and expanded human freedom. But these achievements represent democracy’s promise, not its completion.

The book offers a hopeful, clear-eyed vision for what comes next — a Second Act that builds on the legacy of the first by creating new institutions that tap into the talents, judgment, and capabilities of ordinary people. Drawing on democratic innovations from more than a dozen countries, MacLeod and Johnson show that the public isn’t a risk to be managed but a resource to be tapped.

Smart, story-driven, and fiercely optimistic, Democracy’s Second Act is for readers who still believe in the promise — and potential — of the public.

Democracy is in peril. It’s time for the second act.

Advance Praise

Cover of a book titled "Democracy's Second Act" by Peter MacLeod and Richard Johnson - Illustration from Democracy’s Second Act showing ideas radiating outward

Peter MacLeod and Richard Johnson are engaging speakers who bring big democratic ideas down to earth.

Their talks are grounded in real-world experience—working with governments, communities, and citizens across countries—and shaped by a simple question: what would democracy look like if we trusted people with more responsibility?

They speak to audiences who are curious about the future of democracy but tired of slogans and culture-war noise. Whether in a keynote, interview, or facilitated conversation, they focus on what’s changing, what’s possible, and what actually works.

If you’re looking for a talk that takes democracy seriously, respects the audience, and leaves people thinking differently about their own role in public life, please write to info@democracyssecondact.org

Bring the authors to your event or community

We’ve created two simple discussion guides to help readers explore the book’s ideas together. The questions are meant to open up conversation and invite people to reflect on their own experiences of democratic life — the good and the bad. The questions assume no prior expertise and avoid partisan framing.

Let’s talk about democracy

Media Clippings

Meet the some of people, organizations and ideas featured in Democracy’s Second Act

Explore the sources that make up Democracy’s Second Act

If you want to go deeper, the book’s web bibliography is available here and includes links and citations to more than 250 distinct sources—books, articles, reports, documentaries, datasets, and primary materials—that shaped the thinking behind the book.

About the authors

Peter MacLeod, Co-author of Democracy’s Second Act book cover – Why Politics Needs the Public

Peter MacLeod is the founder and principal of MASS LBP where for nearly two decades he has been at the forefront of democratic innovation championing a new approach to politics that gives more people a seat at the table. A trusted advisor to governments at all levels, he is one of Canada’s leading voices on democracy, active citizenship and working with the public.

Richard Johnson, Co-author of Democracy’s Second Act book cover – Why Politics Needs the Public

Richard Johnson is a former journalist and current policy director at MASS LBP. His writing has appeared in The Globe and Mail, Toronto Star, The Walrus, Reader’s Digest, This Magazine, The New Quarterly, and many others. A former Fellow in Literary Journalism at the Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity, he was also a longtime writer for the award-winning podcast Trailblazers, with Walter Isaacson.

Follow Peter on:

Bluesky @petermacleod.bsky.social
LinkedIn @petermacleod

Follow Richard on:

Bluesky @richard-tk.bsky.social
LinkedIn @richardjohnson