In the lead-up to this year's election there was conflict amongst political pundits and activists about whether a "youthquake" was set to rattle the foundations of the status quo. And the debate has been reignited with the Electoral Commission releasing contentious data this week about voter turnout of different age groups.
The original debate was parodied after the election in the National Business Review, which published its own piece of fake news about the lack of a youthquake. Titled, "Quake recovery work continues", the earnest news report stated: "There were frantic scenes this week as pundits worked around the clock to reach the victims of a devastating seismic shock that never happened. As many as no bodies are now understood to have been recovered. The so-called youthquake was scheduled to hit New Zealand last weekend, with its epicentre located around most of the country's university campuses. The sudden surge had been expected to knock out National's power system. To date, though, the only bodies recovered appear to have been well-known pundits."
Youthquake forecasts "vindicated"
On Wednesday, the Electoral Commission released its official Voter turnout statistics. These appeared to show that voter turnout had increased significantly amongst younger age groups. This is best conveyed in Laura Walters' Young voter turnout up by 6.5 per cent. Looking at the official figures, Walters reported "The turnout for the 18-24 age bracket rose from 62.7 per cent in 2014, to 69.3 per cent in 2017."
Similarly, the turnout figures for Maori voters were reported to have increased, with Susan Strongman saying "Maori voter turnout increased by 3.5 percentage points across both the Maori and general rolls this year - from 67.6 per cent in 2014 to 71.1 per cent in 2017" - see: Youth voter turnout gets a big bump.
These reports had some activists buoyant and Martyn Bradbury proclaimed that the lesson was: "Don't listen to mainstream pundits" - see: Mainstream media claim no Youth Quake.
Gordon Campbell expressed his satisfaction with the results, saying "youth turnout in New Zealand among the under 30s would be the envy of most other developed countries. Our millennials rocked the vote this year" - see: New Eyes on Trade.
The real story about youth voter turnout
However, as Massey University political scientist Grant Duncan told the AM Show, "You have to remember the commission's figures are a percentage of the enrolled voters". Duncan pointed out that the picture of youth turnout is actually very different when you take into account the fact that a huge proportion of young eligible voters didn't enrol this year - in fact, these statistics went backwards - see Newshub's Election 'youthquake' a myth, figures show.
According to this report, "While turnout for 18 to 24-year-olds on the electoral roll jumped from 62.7 per cent to 69.3 per cent, there were actually fewer in that age group enrolled to vote in 2017 than in 2014." The overall result is that voter turnout amongst youth hardly increased at all, and stayed at incredibly low levels - only about half of young people in the 18- to 24-year-old category voted.
I've carried out my own analysis of the figures, which suggests that, roughly, "the 18-24-year-old age group went from 48 per cent turnout in 2014 to 50 per cent turnout in 2017. This was a 2 percentage point increase. For the 25-29-year-old range, there was a 3-percentage point increase, from 51 per cent to 54 per cent. And in the next band, 30-34-year-olds, the increase was 5 percentage points - from 59 per cent to nearly 64 per cent. The other age bands didn't change much" - see my blog post, No real youthquake in 2017.
Similarly, once you take into account adult New Zealanders who don't enrol, the overall voter turnout for the election amongst all age groups was about 73 per cent. This was up only about 1 percentage point, from 72 per cent in 2014. Hence, the turnout appears to be the third lowest since women got the vote. Therefore, the so-called "missing million" voters - or 963,854, by my calculations - were still absent from the electoral process.
Using a similar approach, blogger David Farrar says there was