Young voters care about climate change. Politicians don’t.

A scan of what politicians are talking about publicly shows that Indonesia’s political class isn’t listening to the demands of young voters. Topics that directly impact people’s lives were talked about the least.

Fishing_Java Sea_Indonesia
Climate change is important for Indonesian young voters but politicians have been turning their backs on these demands. Image: cloud.shepherd / Flickr

Climate change matters a lot to young Indonesians.  

Several national surveys show that Generation Z and Millennials are concerned about the impact of climate change on their lives. 

Politicians, however, appear to be ignoring the issue if their public pronouncements are anything to go by.

A survey of 4,020 young voters in 2021 showed that 70 per cent of respondents were concerned about climate change, behind corruption (85 per cent), environmental degradation (82 per cent) and pollution (74 per cent). Around 61 per cent believe climate change is a severe problem.

Around 89 per cent of Indonesian respondents to a survey by Bath University, UK,  were anxious about the possible impact of climate change on their lives while 66 per cent said they would be directly affected by climate change. Most worried respondents live in disaster-prone provinces such as Jakarta, South Sumatra, and North Sumatra.

A survey by the Climate Change Communication Center at Yale University in 2023 of 3,490 adults in 34 provinces showed that respondents prioritise environmental concerns, with water scarcity topping the list at 91 per cent, followed by storms or tornadoes (88 per cent), droughts (87 per cent), forest fires (86 per cent), water pollution (85 per cent), air pollution (83 per cent), floods (83 per cent), rising sea levels (77 per cent), and extreme heat (69 per cent).

These show that there is strong interest in climate change among Indonesia’s younger people.

The same cannot be said about Indonesia’s politicians who have yet to make the issue a priority. 

Our study of 157 Indonesian politicians’ Facebook posts showed that politicians rarely talk about climate change. 

Data from 2019 to 2023 on accounts belonging to ministers, governors and deputy governors, party chiefs and 48 heads and deputy heads of commission at the House of Representative, revealed that only 106 (out of 983) had posted about climate change at least once. 

The dominant topics from the analysis were global partnership, sustainable transportation and infrastructure, mangrove management and environmental conservation, and economic recovery after the pandemic.  

Topics that directly impact people’s lives were talked about the least by Indonesian politicians. Agriculture and food security, the importance of clean water, extreme weather and climate change awareness made up just 112 posts or 11.39 per cent of all posts.  A mere 18 posts (1.83 per cent) were related to youth involvement in climate change and environmental issues.

We also analysed the proposed vision and mission from the three electoral candidates submitted to the election commission. None pay much attention to climate change and environmental conservation. 

By scanning the vision and mission documents of the three candidates for  four keywords (“environment”, “climate”, “ecology”, and “energy”), we found they were barely mentioned (around 1 per cent).

The Ganjar-Mahfud candidates used these words most (47 times; 1.09 per cent), followed by Anies-Muhaimin with 44 (0.6 per cent) and Prabowo-Gibran with 44 (0.58 per cent).

The documents show that climate change and the environmental issues were not a priority, even though people clearly feel the threat and impact of climate change.

According to news monitoring on each candidate, climate change, environmental issues, and energy transition were mainly associated with the poor quality of Jakarta’s air and the urgency of electric vehicles. 

Most candidates only touch on the general problem of green economics and solar panels. No one really seemed to educate the public about climate change or strongly declared promises to solve problems. 

Climate change impacts are felt by everyone, from villages to cities. In cities, air pollution affects residents, while in remote areas, drought and crop failure are continual threats.

However, during the vice president candidates’ debate on climate change, they did not touch on the main causes of climate change Indonesia is facing, such as deforestation, illegal logging, and mining

The Indonesian presidential election has so far failed to recognise environmental issues. 

Instead of addressing climate issues in their agendas, politicians prefer to hire influencers and appear on contemporary social media platforms (TikTok and Instagram Live) to attract new, younger voters.

When they do address issues, it is more likely to be on more populist ones like free meals for preschool students, raising teacher salaries,  or direct financial subsidy for pregnant women. 

The lack of climate change discussion and debates is mainly due to political priorities, economic concerns, and current political attitudes towards each candidate, which often takes precedence over long-term environmental considerations. 

Ika Idris, Derry Wijaya and Eka Permanasari are researchers at Monash Climate Change Communication Research Hub, Indonesia. Node. They are also associate professors at Monash University Indonesia, and are with the Public Policy and Management Programme, Data Science Programme and Urban Design Programme respectively. 

Originally published under Creative Commons by 360info™.

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