Mission: To strengthen effective citizenship in the United States through a new commitment to national service.

Why Everyone Serves?

Everyone Serves is part of the Campaign for National Service, a grassroots project to call our national leaders to create a program of mandatory national service for all Americans between the ages of 18-40.

Why Now?

The Time is Right

The 2008 election gives America a remarkable opportunity, a chance to reshape the nation to face the challenges, opportunities, and responsibilities of the 21st century. Call the next president and congress to create a program of mandatory national service -- a service draft -- that will create a new kind of citizenship in the United States. Help create a citizen ethic built around a common commitment to the strength of the nation and society. Give each generation the chance to learn in their own way the value of shared contribution and sacrifice. Bring credibility to our nation’s dedication to a republic of the people, for the people, and by the people.

Left, Right, or Middle

This call is nonpartisan: the ideas within in it have been supported by people from the right including David Brooks and Melvin Laird, and people from the left including John Edwards and Joe Klein. Some of these have called for a new military draft, and while Everyone Serves supports the continuation of the volunteer military, there is agreement on the core issues.

Service to Many Communities

This call is beyond military. Everyone Serves proposes a program of two years of service for all young people. Though there must be delays and exemptions for extraordinary circumstances, this will be a program for all Americans, and will be built to offer a wide variety of options in service so that a young person may work in an urban library, on a border or port, at a homeless shelter, a national park, a healthcare institution, or at any of thousands of other places. If the individual chooses to volunteer for military service, that service will fulfill the national service requirement.

How You Can Help

Tell your friends about Everyone Serves, sign our petition, tell your candidates (from president to congress) you support mandatory national service, subscribe to our email notices, comment on our postings, read the full list of possibilities and contact us with your suggestions.

U.S. Community Service Advocates Outline Ambitious Plan for Universal Voluntary Service

A group of national service champions, representing current and former executives in nonprofits and government, have outlined a Call to National Service for the next president and congress. Their plan proposes the creation of a National Service American Dream Account which would invest $5,000 upon the birth of every child in the United States. That investment could be increased by parents and relatives, and would grow for tax-free withdrawal, after the child in question reached age eighteen and served one year of national service.

Obama Outlines Service Plan

[Update 22 February 2008: the Obama plan is outlined in full on the site. Barack Obama's Plan for Universal Voluntary Public Service.]

In a 5 December 2007 speech in Mount Vernon, Iowa, Senator Barack Obama outlined an ambitious plan for a voluntary national service plan. Building on many of the existing programs, and proposing several new ones, Obama's plan follows the outline of a series of volunteer programs proposed by Chris Dodd in June.

As a nonprofit booster, I am pleased by the emphasis on nonprofit organization and their social innovations. I wish Senator Obama made his plan mandatory in some way, but see the coherence of this call for voluntary effort and his own campaign.

Below are excerpts of Obama's speech with the specific proposals.

Senator Dodd's National Service Plan Detailed

Chris Dodd's web site includes a full description of his new national service plan to be announced formally in New Hampshire on Saturday. The Dodd American Community Initiative does not mandate service for young adults, though it does call for significant expansion of the voluntary service programs offered today and the creation of new programs. It's an ambitious approach, with something for everyone. Here are the main points:

  • Promote the Corporation for National and Community Service (CNS) to Cabinet Status.
  • Mandate School-Based Service as a Requirement for High School Graduation.
  • Double the Size of the Peace Corps by 2011 and Again by 2050.
  • Dramatically Increase the Number of AmeriCorps Members to 1,000,000 and Immediately Raise the Amount of the Education Award.

A Question For Dodd and Edwards

I prepared the following 30-second question for the two Democratic candidates who have expressed an active interest in national service. It has been submitted to the CNN-Youtube Debates.


Do You Support National Service? Share Your Voice

This is a call to those who support strengthening our national service programs, whether by expanding volunteer programs (ServeNext, AmeriCorps, Learn and Serve America, Senior Corps, and Peace Corps) creating a national service academy (U.S. Public Service Academy), or instituting mandatory national service (Everyone Serves). There is broad interest and support for this cause as evidenced by the writings from voices on the right and left.

The problem, as I see it, is that there is also a vocal opposition to these ideas. That opposition has posted most of the comments on this site. I welcome passion, but want to see that both sides are heard. I will stipulate that the Libertarians will never support the ideas on this site. But many Libertarians would also reject income tax, pollution regulations, and a slew of other policies that most of us see as helping to maintain the society.

So if you think that our country should strengthen its national service programs, share your voice. Many of the dissenting voices on this site choose to post anonymously. You can do so as well. Please show the vocal opposition that there is also a corps of support. Make a comment on this post, or most of the other pieces on this site. I welcome your participation.

Chris Dodd to 'Preview' His National Service Plan on Web, Wed 20 June 2007 at 5:00 pm EDT

Senator Chris Dodd, a returned Peace Corps volunteer, plans to announce his national service plan on his web site in a national town hall meeting at 5:00 pm EDT on Wednesday 20 June 2007. Dodd's site, in a request to other returned Peace Corps volunteers, notes (emphasis mine):

Chris Dodd knows that to meet today's challenges at home and abroad we must fully engage the talents of all Americans. That's why Chris Dodd is working on a national universal service plan that once again asks all of us to be part of something larger than ourselves. Chris Dodd needs your voice and vision to make this plan the best it can be.

This looks promising for the Everyone Serves campaign. We'll see what Dodd outlines on Wednesday, but "national universal service plan" sounds something like what we are looking for.

Joe Klein Calls for Substance in the Campaign, Including National Service

Joe Klein has a long piece in Time Magazine this week. The Courage Primary outlines the five issues Klein feels the candidates must address to get his attention and respect. On the fifth page of the online article, Klein explains why he feels we need a new military draft (with a nonmilitary service option). Klein says:

Not every 18-year-old would be pressed into two years of military service. Other options would be available: service as homeland- and border-security guards or airport check-in inspectors. In each of these cases, two years' service as a draftee would be the first step in a career ladder if you wanted to become, say, a professional border guard.

Resources and Related Organizations Posted

I've posted links to some related organizations and resources on the new Related Resources page.

There you will find links to Charles Rangel's announcement for his national service bill, [full text: H.R. 393]; an op-ed piece by Gary L. Yates of the California Wellness Foundation; and links to related organizations Olympic Institute for Leadership Development, ServeNext, and U.S. Public Service Academy.

Visit and learn. Please suggest additional resources in the comments.

Oregon Governor, Nonprofit Support Mandatory National Service

The Democratic Governor of Oregon, Ted Kulongoski, and the Olympic Institute for Leadership Development have separately called for a mandatory program requiring two years of national service. The governor, in an interview run on 10 May 2007 in the Oregonian called for a change in how the military recruits its membership.

For example, he comes about as close [as] you can to advocating a return to the draft. The all-volunteer military is becoming obsolete, he suggests, and says a mandatory two years of national service is the answer.

"If the military is an optional part of national service, that's fine." [Kulongoski said.]

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