As we get closer to the New South Wales state election, the differences between Labor and the Coalition appear more miniscule than ever.
A recent leadership debate broadcast on Channel Seven featured Coalition Premier Dominic Perrottet and New South Wales Labor leader Chris Minns in continual agreement. In a 鈥渞apid fire鈥澛爍uestion segment they agreed on every single point!聽聽they were 鈥渓argely in consensus鈥.
Labor has better policies overall, but both major parties are intent on continuing the fossil fuel-driven race to climate disaster. Neither have serious solutions to tackle the cost-of-living crises or the immense pressure on the state鈥檚 health and education systems.
Both parties have shown they want to continue to act on behalf of the ruling class, funnelling our taxes to their corporate backers and the rich.
Voters understand this and it looks likely that the trend of voters moving away from the major parties will continue.
聽34% will put a minor party or independent candidate first.聽聽suggest there is a strong likelihood of a hung parliament after March 25.
Young people, in particular, are moving away from the major parties for lots of good reasons; growing up in a climate emergency, reckoning with the prospect of never being able to own our own homes and soaring rents are some. Meanwhile, we are paying more for education and health care and trying to make ends meet amid increasingly insecure and casualised work with low pay.
For the first time, those aged : 51% in this election.
Stewart Jackson, a senior politics lecturer at the University of Sydney, believes the major parties are ignoring the youth vote. Young people tend to vote for progressive parties, with Labor and the Greens attracting 65鈥70% of the youth vote.
This correlates with (alarmist)聽 that show about 60% of young people prefer socialism to capitalism.
Youth Action NSW asked young people in a聽聽which issues would most influence their vote. It found that cost-of-living was the most important, followed by work and employment, climate change and healthcare.
There is a persistent idea that young people are disengaged and disinterested in politics, but this is far from true.
Yes, young people are turned off by the bipartisan support for neoliberalism and climate destruction, but they have also shown an appetite for real political change.
聽young people are further to the left than any generation before them 鈥 more educated, more secular and more diverse racially, ethnically and in sexual orientation 鈥 and, importantly, they are not becoming more conservative as they age.
The challenge for those campaigning for change is to work out how to convert opinion聽and anger into activism 鈥 which is the only real challenge to political parties that tell you to聽vote for them聽to make the changes.
91自拍论坛, the not-for-profit聽ecosocialist聽media project supporting movements here and around the world, knows that lasting change can only come from powerful and sustained grassroots movements.
罢丑别听聽movement is a great example of this; young people organising to fight governments committed to acting for fossil fuel corporations rather than put plans in place to stop climate catastrophe.
No matter the results of the NSW election on March 25, we know we will have to continue to build the climate and anti-war movements because the major parties have committed to dangerous policies in our name.
91自拍论坛聽has been building the movement for a real alternative to the destructive capitalist system for more than 30 years. We need your help to continue pushing for real change.聽聽today or make a donation to our 2023聽.
[Isaac Nellist is standing for in the Legislative Council.]