The New Zealand Herald

Poll ‘all about you’ says Ardern in plea for youth turnout

- Isaac Davison

With three days to go until the election, Labour leader Jacinda Ardern has made a last-ditch plea for young voters to turn up at the polling booth.

Ardern told university students yesterday that Saturday’s general election was “all about you” because the next Government would decide young people’s housing and education choices for the next 10 years.

The Electoral Commission is reporting that the number of youth enrolments has risen in the past two weeks compared with 2014.

In the 25-to-29 age-group they were up 51 per cent. But overall, youth enrolments are still tracking behind the previous election.

As of Sunday, a total of 314,702 people aged between 18 and 24, or 68.3 per cent, were enrolled, compared with 74 per cent at the same point in 2014.

In the 25-to-29 category, 76 per cent have enrolled compared with 79.4 per cent in 2014.

Enrolments are being keenly watched because of Labour’s call for a “youthquake” which could swing the election in its favour. A surge of young voter enrolments were credited with lifting British Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn to the brink of a huge upset in the British election in June.

Ardern campaigned in Wellington yesterday, including a speech before a crowd of 500 students in the University of Victoria’s quad.

“What an amazing day to vote,” Ardern said, referring to the 124th anniversar­y of women’s suffrage.

She asked how many had cast early vote, and about a third of the crowd lifted their hands.

“This is an election about you,” she said. “This is our chance to say that we can be a country where things keep being better and better for your generation rather than worse.

“And at the moment we’re at a fork in the road where we will either walk down a path where things aren’t better or where things are.”

She made her pitch to young people: warm, dry homes, free ter-

This is our chance to say that we can be a country where things keep being better and better for your generation rather than worse. Jacinda Ardern, Labour leader

tiary education, $50 more a week for student costs, and action on climate change to reduce debt on future generation­s.

Green Party candidate Chloe Swarbrick, who was also at the university, said the lower youth enrolment figures were at odds with the excitement and political engagement she had witnessed at campuses around the country.

She had noticed, however, that “huge numbers” of young people still did not properly grasp the MMP system, and she spent much of her campaignin­g giving them a civics education.

When Swarbrick joined the Greens, she said, she had hoped to address the perpetual issue of low turnout among young people. To do this, she has a 12-strong team aged under 30, and has been throwing gigs to try to appeal to hospitalit­y and retail workers who are less likely to vote than university students.

Curia Market Research principal David Farrar, who polls for the National Party, said his analysis showed enrolment for people aged between 18 and 29 was about 2 per cent down on the last election.

“The big growth is the over-60s,” he said. “So on the enrolment side there is absolutely no evidence for youthquake.”

He said there were two caveats. Now that people were able to enrol and vote at polling booths there could be a rise in youth numbers in the last week before the election.

Also, enrolment is not a precise guide to final turnout. He said it was possible but not probable that final turnout could be higher than 2014 even if enrolments were lower.

 ?? Picture / Mark Mitchell ?? Syrian immigrant Fatima Abdullah shares the love with Jacinda Ardern in Wellington yesterday.
Picture / Mark Mitchell Syrian immigrant Fatima Abdullah shares the love with Jacinda Ardern in Wellington yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand