this post was submitted on 09 May 2025
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Housing is expensive, opportunities are disappearing, healthcare and education are being hollowed out.
This country is doomed but we have nobody to blame but ourselves. We voted for these bozos.
At least the trans people will not be allowed to poop in the bathroom they are presenting as so I guess that's something. We are going to show those trans people who is who and where they belong.
Who do you mean by we? I don't know any boomer who isn't right wing. I know very very few right wingers outside of that generation. Anacdotal yes, but I can't help think this is the last gift from their generation before they cark it.
It also doesn't help that the right seems to shift the landscape further right, while the left sits on their hands and nothing barely changes. Its hard to label labour left anymore honestly. Just a constant ratcheting towards this brainless neoliberal experiment gone rogue.
What was the last policy implemented by any party that had a tangibly positive affect on your living conditions? For me, none at the time I left. Made leaving slightly easier. But now I'm overseas I feel like all countries are sinking ships for workers. NZ feels a lot further along and faster than most.
I agree with Dave.
Although the elderly do skew right that's far from the whole picture.
I am middle aged so my parents' generation are all late Silent Gen or Boomers. None of our parents and their friends are right-wing at all - some of them are still out there trying to save the forests and the oceans.
The people I know irl who voted for National or ACT are all younger - working age.
Edited to add: Anecdotes aside, pretty sure statistically we are seeing a resurgence of ACT that is driven by affluent young men, while there is also a contingent of disenfranchised working-class people who vote for Winston.
Yes, and! From me on that.* There are a lot of perhaps temporary voters who swung away from Labour as part of the hangover from the Covid times. But there's also a large voting block made up predominantly of white, male, historically middle-class folks who have also swung right.
When i've engaged with them they tend to be rabidly anti-green; quite chauvinist and have a simmering racist resentment as they experience their once privileged position being eroded away. They work fairly hard, but due to high house prices and cost of goods in general are finding that they can't get ahead in life like their parents did.
They have legitimate complaints but as is often the case are easily led to blaming the folks suffering even worse than they for their problems rather than the dominant agenda's since the 80s that are the real problem.
*For the most part anyway, a lot of my parents generation are old fashioned Nats mostly because I come from a farming background.
This is it in a nutshell.
I have boomer family who have voted right wing their whole lives and got more leftist as they got older.
I also know people in their 30s that are out there campaigning for Act, full leopards ate my face stuff.
Generally the people I am close with are not right wing, but that's more a lack of commonalities to base a friendship on. I think you'd be surprised to find how much support National, Act, (and even NZF) get in the younger populations.
By "we" I mean the country as a whole.
so "we" voted for the batshit crazy right and the do nothing middle. We could have voted differently, we didn't.