New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern to resign next month

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Update : Saturday, January 21, 2023

New Zealand prime minister, Jacinda Ardern announced on Thursday, that she will resign next month, saying she no longer has “enough in the tank” to remain as leader.
“I am human. We give as much as we can for as long as we can and then it’s time. And for me, it’s time,” she said at a meeting of members of her Labour Party. “I just don’t have enough in the tank for another four years.” She said.
Ardern became prime minister in a coalition government in 2017 and then led her centre-left labour Party to a comprehensive victory in an election three years later.
During her time as leader, she won international acclaim for her handling of a terror attack on two Muslim mosques and the Covid-19 pandemic and became only the second world leader to give birth while in office.
But her party and personal popularity, which is often denoted to as “Jacindamania”, have dropped in recent domestic polls amid escalating inflation and fears of a rising crime rate.
In her first public appearance since parliament went into its summer recess a month ago, she told Labour’s annual caucus retreat that she had hoped to find the energy to continue as a leader during the break, “but I have not been able to do that”.
The next general election will be held on Saturday, 14 October, Ardern revealed in her announcement in Napier on the country’s eastern coast.
The prime minister also said that she would continue to serve as an electorate MP until then.
Although recent polls indicate a coalition of the centre-right National and Act parties will win the election, Ardern said that, apparently, that was not the reason for her resignation.
“I am not leaving because I believe we cannot win the next election, but because I believe we can and will,” she said. “I am leaving because with such a privileged job comes a big responsibility. The responsibility to know when you are the right person to lead, and also when you’re not.”
Ardern said her resignation would take effect no later than 7 February, and that the Labour caucus would vote on a new leader in three days.
Deputy prime minister Grant Robertson said he would not be setting his name forward.
Ardern’s party has been battling declining trust in government, a deteriorating economic situation, and a resurgent conservative opposition.
The stress has been obvious recently, with Ardern showing a rare lapse of poise last month when she was unintentionally caught on a microphone calling an opposition politician an “arrogant prick”.


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