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Neville Male's avatar

This article does nothing to stress how important it is to vote and will not help convince those who are disallusioned with politics or are undecided who to vote for and that is a great pity. Yes there is and always has been much apathy toward general election voting but this election is probably the most important since the 1943 election when after WWII important decisions needed to be made about the future of New Zealand. That time has arrived again and it would have been approriate for the article to have concluded by stressing that despite the political doom and gloom ( largely perpetuated by the media) it is important that every eligible New Zealander must excercise their democratic right and vote on 14 October. Surely as a political commentator the Democracy Project must be a strong advocate for that !

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Basil Brush's avatar

A sound enough appraisal of voter sentiment, Bryce. There is a mutinous mood afoot. It is intensified by the accelerating polarising of opinion in the electorate and the pejorative ad hominem attacks by those on the extremes.

Not voting is indeed an option but voting 'No Confidence in any Party' by way of a tickbox would be more constructive.

Why no mention of Treaty issues in your analysis? A great many of my friends - decent, thinking, caring, intelligent Kiwis every one of them - have come to resent MSM's silence on a matters in which they are entitled to have a voice. Co-governance is germane to the election and the country's constitutional future yet appears to be the Voldemort issue whose name must never be spoken. Not least by MSM. This betrayal of mature analysis amounts to social activism by journalists and commentators like you. No wonder voters are disillusioned and sensitive to being disenfranchised like this.

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