The youth of Australia have thrown their vote in Google’s centralized election, electing to stay the Australian Labor Party (ALP) in authority for one more term. Undergraduate Voice 2010 was a centralized election run by Google for 15 to 17 year old students across Australia and intended to give the next generation of voters a political voice.

The undergraduate vote was witness across 72 electorates in Australia and resulted in Labor winning 28 Lower House seats, the Coalition 25 seats, the Greens 15 seats, and the Christian Democrat Party, self-governing, Family First and One Nation parties each winning one seat. The ALP’s recognition in NSW and Victoria was evident winning 21 out of 28 seats, even as the Coalition took out Queensland and Western Australia, pleasing the marginal seat of His luck with 56 per cent of votes.

The Greens rocked their position in Victoria, pursuing Lindsay Tanner’s seat of Melbourne; drag half of the undergraduate electorate in the electorate. They sustained their well-liked streak in the council where undergraduate selected for 16 Greens senators, identical with ALP and closely tailing the Coalition.