Australia’s voice to parliament Polling catchments where Indigenous Australians form more than 50% of the population voted on average 63% in favour of the voice

  • Nonameuser678
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    1 year ago

    That was in booths where the population is at least 50% Indigenous. It’s difficult to capture these demographics directly so they have to do it by % Indigenous population in each booth / area.

    • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      But that just makes the numbers even more meaningless. While it might be very likely that most of the Yes votes came from indigenous people, it’s also possible that 100% of the non-indigenous people in that area voted Yes and a majority of indigenous people voted No.

      Stretcing 63% of the overall vote into an overwhelming majority of indigenous people lacks journalistic integrity.

      • naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 year ago

        You would expect non indigenous votes to track similar patterns to other nearby polling stations. Consider the pretty smooth gradient we see with yes vs no generally.

        It’s not unreasonable to expect non indigenous voting to track the 60% no. It would be strange if they didn’t, possible but not really a reasonable assumption.

        So in a 50% place with a 60/40 split you might expect somewhere like the (previously indicated) ~80% voting yes. Perhaps a bit lower, but still high support.

        Again, this isn’t the only indicator of indigenous support given the earlier polling.

        • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          Sure, in casual conversation it’s a reasonable assumption. That doesn’t hold for journalists writing news articles - particularly when it is stated as fact and not clarified. You have to analyse the numbers to realise the headline is hollow.

          • naevaTheRat@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 year ago

            No that’s literally how statistical inference works. If you think they’ve made an error submit a letter and get them to retract the article.

            • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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              1 year ago

              No it isn’t, there’s a massive gap in the statistics where the inference should be derived from. If you think I’m wrong then explain it, don’t brush it off without actually saying anything meaningful.

              How can you infer that an overwhelming portion of one group supported something when all you have is the combined level of support and no statistics on the individual groups, other than a ratio of population size?

              It’s an assumption, it’s not labeled as such, that’s bad journalism.

              • abhibeckert@beehaw.org
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                1 year ago

                Sometimes assumptions have to be made especially in this case.

                The AEC policy is to cast aside your vote so it doesn’t count towards the election - e.g. if you write your name or signature on the ballot paper, it will tossed out when they count the vote. If you take a selfie with your ballot paper showing how you voted, they are also required to discard your vote.

                Reliable data on exactly how people voted is not available and cannot ever be available (under current laws)… so, yes, pretty much anything relating to the election is based on assumptions. That doesn’t make them useless. I’m assuming the sun will rise tomorrow morning… I don’t have any proof, but a lack of proof doesn’t make my assumption wrong.

                The data they provided is pretty compelling - for example the Wadeye electorate where 92% of the vote was Yes. And by the way, about 90% of that electorate were are indigenous in the 2016 Census (pretty old now, but it likely hasn’t changed much).

                What’s also interesting is those communities bucked other major trends in this election:

                • Wadeye is about as far as you can possibly get from a major city and still be on the mainland… Adelaide is the closest proper city — 3,230km from Wadey. In general the further from a city people are the more likely they are to have voted No.
                • I’m making an assumption here, but based on the fact they are so far from the nearest university there probably aren’t many university educated people in Wadeye… and people with no university education were also more likely to vote No.

                If indigenous and white people shared the same opinion on the vote, then you’d expect Wadeye to have one of the strongest No votes in the country. But nope - they voted 92% yes.

                • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  You mention Wadeye, but the article also says this:

                  Some regions in Queensland, where only 31.3% of the state’s population voted yes, showed a similar break away trend for communities with a high Indigenous population.

                  High indigenous population, yet lower than the overall vote for the nation. The article glosses over how many polling regions this covers.

                  I don’t doubt that the claim is likely true. I just don’t think they’ve done any sort of statistical analysis to actually support their claim. The article just makes a statement, then lists off numbers as if it all lines up. But there are big gaps and strong reasons to doubt the assumption, and yet the article states it as if it is fact.

                  The style of writing is as if they’re writing an article about an academic paper, but they haven’t actually got an academic paper behind it.

                  • RedReaper@infosec.pub
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                    1 year ago

                    I think you’re misunderstanding the quote (or I’m misunderstanding you). That quote is supporting the same trend indicated in Wadeye. The 31.3% refers to QLD as a whole, not the ATSI dense communities specifically.

                • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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                  1 year ago

                  Sometimes assumptions have to be made especially in this case.

                  The person you’re arguing with understands this. They’re not asking in good faith.

                  • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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                    1 year ago

                    Please don’t strawman or insult me. If you can’t have a reasonable discussion then bugger off.

                • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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                  1 year ago

                  Yeah, sure, if I call them out for poor journalism standards they’ll just roll over and accept that, because this article totally wasn’t written with that deception in mind.

                  There’s no statistical analysis here, as you implied, it’s just a bunch of regions with their population size and overall votes. Hell, many of their numbers didn’t even fit the narrative - they had a large majority indigenous population but more No votes, more than the nation overall. It’s just bullshit and hand waving to get you to accept it as true without really thinking about it.

                  You’re trying to set an impossible to prove boundary so you can claim that you “win” the argument. That’s bollocks. If you don’t have anything meaningful to say here, yourself, then kindly bugger off.