Register


Event Details


Event: Civic Conversation: A House Divided: What are the Hard Things We’d Have to Do to Bridge Our Divides?
Starts: Monday 4/20/2026 11:45 AM
Ends: Monday 4/20/2026 01:30 PM
Location: Rudder Exhibition Hall
Presenters: Dr. Anna Wolfe
Hosted By: Aggie Lyceum
Contact Information: AggieLyceum@gmail.com
Description: Please note this is one of three events at the Civil Discourse Symposium. If you plan to attend all three events, then you will need separate tickets for each portion of the day.

Morning Session featuring Representatives McCaul and Cuellar and TAMU Student leaders (9:00-11:30) Registration: tx.ag/qMVeQeP

Afternoon Session featuring former Vice-President Mike Pence (2:00-3:30) Registration: tx.ag/UA6vnfg

As part of the Texas A&M Civil Discourse Symposium (https://stories.tamu.edu/stories/standing-together-student-focused-civil-discourse-symposium-fosters-respect/) the Aggie Lyceum is hosting a Civic Conversation. Based on the National Issues Forum Institute guidebook:

Every American is affected by the divisions and outrage that prevent us from making progress on urgent problems. This issue guide is designed to help people deliberate together about how we should approach the issue.

These are difficult questions, and there are no easy answers:

-Should we require more accurate, respectful discussion in the media and online, or would that stifle free speech?
-Should we reform politics and government to encourage compromise, or will that mean giving up on the changes we really need and want?
-Should local communities set policies in areas like health care and the environment, or would that risk the progress we’ve made and make further progress nearly impossible?
-Should we crack down on money in politics, or will people just find new ways to evade the rules?
-What should we do to get the political system we want?
-What should we do to revive our ability to work together on the most urgent problems?
-What are we willing to give up in order to do so?

This issue guide presents three options for deliberation about difficult problems for which there are no perfect solutions. Each option offers advantages as well as risks. And each reflects different ways of understanding what is at stake, forcing us to think about what matters most to us.

The research involved in developing this guide included interviews and conversations with Americans from all walks of life, as well as surveys of nonpartisan public opinion research, subject-matter scans, and reviews of initial drafts by people with direct experience with the subject.




Registration


Open to: Faculty Staff Undergraduates Grad Students
Registration Starts: Wednesday 3/11/2026 1:00 AM
Registration Ends: Friday 4/17/2026 11:55 PM
Seats Available: 141 of 203
Registration Status: You must be logged in to register for an event. Login Here