While the visit itself was inspiring, it also raised a difficult but necessary question. Is SU democracy truly meaningful, or has it become just a performative gimmick?
At the Senedd, we were given a front row seat to Welsh politics in action. From stepping inside the influential committee rooms where major decisions are debated, to seeing the new chamber being built in anticipation of an expanded 96-member-Senedd, it was a day shaped by themes of participation, progress, and purpose. These aren’t just political buzzwords, they’re principles that should underpin how we run our own student democracy.
Our guide, Joel, offered not just history, but insight. The Senedd’s iconic wavy roof, made from Welsh slate and steel, was designed to symbolize the constant motion of water, and by extension, politics. “You can never stand in the same river twice,” he reminded us. Politics is meant to evolve, respond, and move. When it stops, it stagnates.
That metaphor hit home. It applies not just to national democracy, but to the student level, too.
One of the day’s standout moments was our meeting with Lesley Griffiths MS for Wrexham. As she prepares to retire after a long career in public service, she reflected on some of the legislation she’s most proud of, including the law that requires food hygiene ratings to be clearly displayed in restaurant windows in Wales. It’s a small change with big, visible impact, and in her words, “something you can measure, see, and feel.”
That’s exactly what student democracy needs to strive for: outcomes you can measure, see, and feel. Small, tangible wins that show we’re not just talking about change, we’re making it happen.
Here’s the reality. The Student Council exists to question, advocate, and influence. But similarly to national politics, SU democracy is often met with disinterest. Elections have low turnout. Awareness of Council work is limited. And even Council members themselves sometimes wonder, are we really making a difference?
The answer is yes, but only if we make student democracy visible, engaging, and rewarding.
These aren’t flashy distractions. They’re ways of reinforcing that student democracy is active, responsive, and real. They connect policy to people, meetings to movements, and small-scale democracy to national democracy.
So, is SU democracy just symbolic?
It can be. But it doesn’t have to be.
Yesterday’s trip showed us that democracy at every level only works when people believe in it. That belief must be earned. If we make SU democracy more visible, more rewarding, and more connected to both real life issues and real student lives, it becomes more than representation - it becomes relevance.
It’s not just about giving students a voice, it’s about giving them reasons to use it. Real rewards. Visible progress. Experiences that stay with them long after the Council term ends.
I think to do this we must all ask what more can we do, how can we make our student democrats a bit more Griffiths MS, and make them savour the change they produce.
We can engage and interconnect our local democracy with regional and national democracy. We can encourage, support, and trust our students to lobby politicians and generate change on a wider level.
Let’s stop asking whether SU democracy is a gimmick. Let’s prove that it’s not.
Here at Wrexham, we are on a journey to re-engage our students in our democracy. Join us on that journey.
Written by Ben Sanders, Democracy & Campaigns Coordinator
Edited by Lauren Hole, Communications & Engagement Coordinator
Subscribe to our YouTube channel
Company number: 10111959
Registered Charity: 1168132