Other Priorities: Taken in aggregate, young people have consistently demonstrated that they have other, more pressing, priorities than closely engaging with the electoral process. In this respect, the 18-25-year-old “Baby Boomers” of 1975 – the very same people who, forty years later play such a crucial role in determining New Zealand’s electoral outcomes – proved to be no exception.
MARTYN BRADBURY’S turbulent political career is notable for
its passionate and unwavering commitment to the interests of young New
Zealanders. From his stint as the editor of the University of Auckland’s
student newspaper, Craccum, to his
Sunday night polemics on the youth-oriented Channel
Z radio station, “Bomber” Bradbury’s pitch has always been to those condemned
to live with the consequences of contemporary politicians’ mistakes.
“Bomber” is part old-time preacher. (Who else greets his
audiences with an all-encompassing “Brothers and Sisters!”?) But he is also a
user of the very latest communications technology. Loud, brash, occasionally
reckless, Martyn Bradbury may not be universally liked, or invariably correct,
but his determination to mobilise the young in their own defence cannot be
disputed.
His latest crusade on behalf of younger Kiwis calls for a
lowering of the voting age from 18 to 16 years. This radical extension of the
franchise would be accompanied by the inclusion of a new and comprehensive
programme of civics education in the nation’s secondary school curriculum.
In Martyn’s own words: “The sudden influx of tens of
thousands of new voters with their own concerns and their own voice finally
being heard could be the very means of not only lifting our participation
rates, but reinvigorating the very value of our democracy.”
Very similar arguments were advanced by the champions of
young people’s rights more than 40 years ago. The late 1960s and early 1970s marked
the high point of what left-wing sociologists were already calling the “radical
youth counter-culture”.
The slogan of the so-called “Baby Boom” generation, then in
their teens and twenties, was uncompromising: “Don’t trust anyone over thirty!”
And, political activists among their ranks were convinced that if 18-year-olds
were given the right to vote, then their “revolutionary” generation wouldn’t
hesitate to sock-it-to the squares in the Establishment and usher-in the
long-awaited Age of Aquarius.
Perhaps surprisingly, the Establishment were only too happy
to oblige. In 1971, the Twenty-Sixth Amendment to the United States
Constitution declared: “The right of citizens of the United States, who are
eighteen years of age or older, to vote shall not be denied or abridged by the
United States or by any State on account of age.”
Outgunned: The older generation of Democratic Party politicians were out-organised by George McGovern's young supporters at the 1972 Democratic Party Convention.
Young activists in the Democratic Party wasted little time
in flexing their political muscles. At the 1972 Democratic Party Convention, an
army of young delegates, veterans of the civil rights and anti-Vietnam War
struggles in the streets of America, turned the tables on the old “pols” of the
Democratic Party “machine”. (The same machine which, just four years earlier,
had unleashed the Chicago Police on anti-war convention delegates.) Using the
new party rules which the Chicago debacle had inspired, these youngsters
comprehensively out-organised their much older right-wing opponents and secured
the nomination for George McGovern, the most left-wing presidential candidate
since Franklin Roosevelt.
With millions of new voters eligible to participate, and a
candidate committed to fulfilling a sizeable chunk of the youth agenda of
economic, social and political reforms, the scene seemed set for a sea-change
in American politics.
If only.
In the presidential election of 1968, when the voting
threshold was still set at 21-years-of-age, voter turn-out had been 60.8
percent (a high figure by American standards). With 18-year-olds entitled to
vote, and a radical candidate for them to vote for, the turn-out in 1972 was
55.2 percent – a participation rate 5.6 percentage points lower than the
previous election. To make matters worse, the radical candidate, George
McGovern, suffered one of the most humiliating defeats in American political
history. His conservative opponent, the Republican Party incumbent, Richard
Nixon, was swept back into the White House with 60.7 percent of the popular
vote!
Eighteen-year-olds got the vote in New Zealand in 1974. The
Labour Government of Norman Kirk had not only enfranchised the young, but he
had also ticked-off a great many items on the New Zealand youth agenda for
change. He’d abolished compulsory military training, withdrawn the last
military personnel from Vietnam, sent a frigate to Mururoa Atoll to protest
French atmospheric nuclear testing, and called off the 1973 Springbok Tour. And
that wasn’t all: Kirk had even subsidised the creation of “Ohus” – rural
communes situated on Crown land.
How did the newly enlarged electorate respond one year
later, at the General Election of 1975?
The turn-out in 1972, when the voting age was 20, had been
89.1 percent. Three years later, with tens-of-thousands of “Baby Boomers”
enfranchised, the participation rate fell by 6.6 points to 82.5 percent. Even
worse, the Third Labour Government (the last to evince genuinely left-wing beliefs)
was hurled from office by the pugnacious National Party leader, Rob Muldoon.
The swing from left to right was savage: Labour’s vote plummeted from 48.4
percent in 1972, to just 39.6 percent in 1975. [Mind you, what wouldn’t Labour
give for “just” 39.6 percent support in 2017!?]
Much as I can understand why Martyn believes extending the
franchise to 16-year-olds would harm the re-election prospects of John Key and
the Right, I’m equally aware that the historical record argues precisely the
opposite.
Taken in aggregate, young people have consistently
demonstrated that they have other, more pressing, priorities than closely
engaging with the electoral process. In this respect, the 18-25-year-old “Baby
Boomers” of 1975 – the very same people who, forty years later (as Bomber so rightly
laments) play such a crucial role in determining New Zealand’s electoral
outcomes – proved to be no exception.
When they bother to vote at all, it’s true that young people
tend to vote for the parties of the Left. But, equally, there is no disputing
the fact that their massive and consistent non-participation in the electoral
process continues to be of overwhelming benefit to the Right.
This essay was
originally posted on The Daily Blog
of Friday, 30 October 2015.
Given my last 20 years or so of experience with the teenage brain, I think there's a case for increasing the voting age.
ReplyDeleteWhat relevance has the likely voting intention of 16- and 17-year-olds to the question of whether they (or people even younger) should be able to vote?
ReplyDelete16 year olds are children in every way.
ReplyDeleteEmotionally, intellectually, economically.
What possible justification is there for giving them the vote?
Then (most of them) grow up and get to vote.
Bradbury is an ill informed one sided loudmouth.
That's a simple description rather than a piece of abuse.
By comparison (and at the risk of sycophancy) , though I disagree with your politics, you are well informed an shrewd.
Martyn must be trying to impress someone, it is immature and naïve to propose such an idiocy. I believe that most NZ's would have no-objection to a age increase.
ReplyDeleteLet the current ditzies hyperventilate with Justin Beiber.
ReplyDeleteWhen they bother to vote at all, it’s true that young people tend to vote for the parties of the Left.
ReplyDeleteThe problem is that they are disenfranchised now. The Left died in 1984 and the Greens who should have benefitted (and for whom I still reluctantly vote) cant make their minds up where they stand.
…like totally…voting sux
ReplyDeletesure our oppressors have gotten older, people that enjoyed free tertiary took it off later students and closed local hospitals by the score, but Bomber might realise that important social conditions and subjective consciousness have changed during 30 years of neo liberalism, young people are now highly likely to have an aspirational me me me, mine mine mine attitude
binding referenda and electronic voting seem ideas whose time has come too at first look, but we would likely have capital punishment back and our very own digital “hanging chads” debacle in short order without a lot of preparatory work, you would want to consider several electoral cycles of “civics education” before lowering the voting age
Only a lawyer could ask such a question, Mr Edgeler. Why do you think the upper classes resisted the granting of universal franchise for so long? How people are likely to vote, and whether they should be permitted to vote, are questions that are bound to be asked together - no matter how irrelevant they may be to the fundamental principles surrounding the right to vote.
ReplyDeleteAll the political parties would run a mile from Martins proposal. It is absolute meaningless to pursue. I question his mental state.
ReplyDeleteI have less of a problem with the age at which people are entitled to vote and more of a problem with the ability of a government, of any colour, to pass legislation with a one vote majority when large parts of the electorate are opposed. To see public opinion ignored the moment a party is in power must be a huge turnoff. We don't really have a democracy, and maybe never did. Perhaps we should try a constitution which limits what government can do with a simple majority. Or how about a second chamber chosen purely by ballot similar to jury service?
ReplyDeleteDear GS
ReplyDeleteYou said: "Given my last 20 years or so of experience with the teenage brain, I think there's a case for increasing the voting age."
It's so rare that we agree on anything, I wanted to take the opportunity to endorse your comments. :-)
Look, if we are going to give the vote to children, why stop at 16, heck I've met 12 year olds who outshine many people twice their age with their intelligence, insight and wit.
I still like the idea of 'no representation without taxation', so if you are a net tax payer, regardless of your age, you should be eligible to vote. This may disqualify an ocean of beneficiaries and possibly many of the lower paid, but if they are getting back from the State constantly more than they are contributing, then it's difficult to see how they might have justification for complaint.
Won't stop the complaints mind you.
Waiting....
Greypower may take issue with your line of reasoning Brendan....perhaps restricting voting to those with a 3 digit IQ may be safer don't you think?
ReplyDelete@ Brendan; Beneficiaries pay tax Brendan, so do the low paid workers. One can argue about their 'contribution to society' until the cows come home.
ReplyDelete16years is too young to vote in my opinion, even 18 is debatable.
Brendan, you never disappoint :-) – still with the prevalent and often tortuous ways that many of the well off avoid paying taxes altogether, you might cut out more people than you think – including many people who would vote National. Still, it might encourage some of the well off to actually contribute. So well done.
ReplyDeleteTo be fair, he did say "net" taxpayer.
ReplyDeleteApparently one of the reasons for allowing 16 year olds to vote is to try and get more of the electorate to actually vote on Election Day. Civic classes at school would encourage those 16 year olds to vote and they would therefore encourage their parents to vote too. Currently not many 18 year olds, who have left school, vote and also few vote at 21. If they don't vote at three elections they never vote. I read that somewhere!
ReplyDeleteIt seems to me that the only workable criterion is that every citizen over the requisite age is entitled to a vote, full stop. And I think that should include those behind bars. Another reason in favour a constitution limiting the power of government is that no government should be able to remove the right of a citizen to vote.
ReplyDeleteBrendan
ReplyDeleteIntelligence is not what qualifies you to vote. My late and much lamented mog was rather more intelligent than many humans I know, yet lived her life unenfranchised. It's a moot point whether she should have been.
I thought it was no taxation without representation, not vice versa.
ReplyDeleteBrendon gets it totally about-face. Why am I unsurprised?
t'other thing is that we all pay GST, which is regressive and payable when you purchase something and hence similar to the taxes that provoked the "no taxation without representation" shtich in the first place.
ReplyDeleteBrendan
ReplyDeleteBeneficiaries contribute little or nothing? There is no reason why they couldn't be doing plenty through part-time work if the country hadn't been run down to such an extent that most of the useful jobs they could have done have been lost to overseas business. And many bennies are mothers, they have produced children, as your mother did. And who would want to question the worth of her work?
NZ has a nasty attitude that lurks in people's minds, a mean, grasping and limited approach linking respect to earnings of an individual.
This doesn't take in the wide interests of a modern advanced society with a strong commitment to fairness, and building capacity in an individual. NZs aren't allowed to make outrageous sexist, racist remarks now but they can all turn to a benny and kick her/him in the backside and feel virtuous because of the prevalence of this deplorable gene resulting in aberrant, vituperative behaviour.
"And who would want to question the worth of her work?"
ReplyDeleteBrendan does, regularly. I think he is an advocate of eugenics.