There is nothing more painful in politics than watching a panel of young people being asked why so many of their generation are not voting. The presumption of the questions put to them is always that government is going wrong and young people have a golden opportunity to change it.
That is probably the view of the volunteers in the voter participation drive who know it would be uncool for young people to declare contentment with the status quo.
So the youth feel obliged to mumble sentiments that make them sound alienated, confused, vaguely idealistic and a bit dumb. They are not. They know exactly why the turnout is lower among their peers: younger voters are less likely to make the effort when there is no reason to change.
They have grown up in a very settled political era. Helen Clark was the first Prime Minister they really knew and she was okay for three elections. Key is still okay. That's about it, really.
Laila Harre has taken the leadership of an Internet Party financed by a recent immigrant who is wanted in the United States on charges arising from an internet operation that has made him a fortune. He wants to stop law enforcement agencies using the internet as effectively as they could. This may be a viewpoint shared by many young people but just as many, I suspect, find Kim Dotcom a bumptious clown, if not a crook, who has been here about four years and assumes the right to change our government. Where does this guy get off?
Every time he purses his lips, blows out his cheeks and pronounces his intentions, I wonder what would happen if a resident American plutocrat was to fund a political party for the expressed purpose of removing a Labour government. John Campbell would be on his case.
Newcomers to a country are normally circumspect about its politics for good reason. They feel like somebody newly included in a family. You are very careful about taking sides in disputes, conscious that there will be a great deal you do not know.
When Dotcom announced he was going to change the government he clearly had no idea how our electoral system works. He formed a new party, apparently unaware that unless it won 5 per cent of all the votes cast, which was not likely, it would do the opposite, it would help the Government get re-elected.
Every vote it won would be taken out of the count, thereby increasing National's proportion of the votes that would be counted.
The Green Party tried to explain this publicly but their statements were interpreted simply as fear the new party would take votes from them. (The Greens' share of the counted votes would have increased too).
Russel Norman finally went to the Dotcom mansion to explain the intricacies of MMP in person to the maestro of mega uploads and the penny dropped. Dotcom realised he would need to hitch his Internet Party to an electorate MP if any votes that it won were to count.
Only one anti-Government MP outside the Labour Party has an electorate. Hone Harawira was his only option. Harawira is lonely in Parliament, he told Shane Jones he might get out. Now he is almost certain to have a companion in the House. The only question is whether Internet-Mana plunders a little of Labour's vote or attracts some of the last election's non-voters.
Dotcom says he will step back now, leave it to Harre to attract the internet generation. That's wise, though on television this week, standing beside the two politicians in his pocket, Dotcom has never looked younger.