The 2023 Census and Multicultural Identity

This article was originally published for paying subscribers for Good Oil News INSIGHT and is reproduced here for all Right Minds readers on a delayed basis.

Dieuwe de Boer
Insight

Stats NZ have finally released the full data of the botched 2023 census. There are lots of things you can glean from it, such as the inclusion of sexuality data showing that nearly 12% of Wellington is gay, which makes sense if you think about it. The ethnicity data is also interesting, all part of the "Aotearoa Data Explorer".

Only around 56% were European New Zealander, a further 8% Anglo-Maori and 4% other mixed European New Zealanders, bringing the total to around 68% if we're being generous. There is some contention of the use of the term European here, but it has a long history and should be seen as synonymous with "New Zealander" or "White New Zealander".

When it comes to electoral law calculations, anyone who ticks a Maori box is treated as Maori for the purpose of representation, around 17% of the population.

When it comes to those identifying as Maori only, I think we get a better view of the place the Maori Party has in current polling. Just over 7% of the population identifies as purely Maori and recent polling puts TPM's support at between 4-6%. An outright majority of "true" Maori support the Maori Party and its policy.

Then we get to the rest of the population, around 6% are Pacific Islanders and 16% are Asian (mostly Chinese, Indian, and Filipino) with the remaining 3% having some other non-European ethnic identity.

If we prioritise those identifying with the "New Zealand" ethnicity in some form, we get the following distribution designed to add up to 100%:

  • 68% New Zealander (56% European, 8% Anglo-Maori, 4% half-European)
  • 16% Asian
  • 7% Maori (inflated to 17% when calculating Maori Electorates)
  • 6% Pacific Islander
  • 3% Other

StatsNZ doesn't present the data that way, but I think it's a more useful reflection of both how immigration is very rapidly demographically changing New Zealand and the success of the Maori ethno-nationalist movement in nearly converting half of those with Maori ancestry to their cause. At the current pace, European New Zealanders will be a minority by the next census in 2028. This is important to keep in mind with growing anti-white rhetoric and racial hatred coming from our public institutions, journalists, and university lecturers.

Now we must talk a little about the multicultural strategy of our political parties, because this census data is very important to them and their electoral policy.

We can use Filipinos as an example. Please note that I am not singling them out, but public comments from the Filipino MP Paulo Garcai were the first to come across my desk. This is simply an example and in the following section you can swap out "Filipino" with any Asian ethnic group of your choice.

"We are more than just a growing number—we are a growing voice in New Zealand. The Filipino community is becoming an integral part of this country’s future, and I am dedicated to ensuring that this voice is heard in Parliament and beyond."
Paulo Garcia to Chris Lynch Media

Paulo Garcia is an MP who represents foreign interests in Parliament for the National Party and is a "proud Filipino New Zealander". I'm not singling him out, but using him as an illustration. There are many others. This is a deliberate strategy by National. 100,000 Filipino votes that you can count on are nice in an election. All they want in return is to ensure their ethnic interests are being met. The socially conservative faction in National are in favour, as these migrants are largely Roman Catholic. The Roman Catholic church is happy too, by some estimates over half its weekly church attendees are foreign-born.

"The Filipino community’s influence will only continue to grow, and I’m proud to be part of a movement that strengthens New Zealand’s multicultural identity."

To place this into perspective, The Philippines is a wonderful ethnically diverse and multicultural country that has multiple active violent racial conflicts raging. The only silver lining perhaps is that a society which looks like the Philippines occasionally produces an electorate desperate enough to vote for strong men like Rodrigo Duterte to give them a reprieve from the chaos.

Fun, but not exactly what I want my country to look like.

I spoke with Harry Richardson from the British Australian Community on RCR recently, have a listen if you if you want to understand identity politics. He points out that you cannot stop multiculturalism by ignoring it. Instead you too must become part of the multicultural community. If you choose not to participate then you simply lose. The only way to defeat identity politics is with your own identity politics that creates and solidifies a super-majority position or you will be swept away with the tide.

About the author

Dieuwe de Boer

Editor of Right Minds NZ, host of The Dialogue on RCR, and columnist at The BFD. Follow me on Telegram and Twitter. In addition to writing about conservative politics and reactionary thought, I like books, gardening, biking, tech, reformed theology, beauty, and tradition.

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