From the BBC:
“Jacinda Ardern: New Zealand PM to step down next month”
Jacinda Ardern has announced she
will quit as New Zealand prime minister next month, saying she no longer has
"enough in the tank" to lead. Ms Ardern choked up as she detailed how
six "challenging" years in the job had taken a toll. She will step
down as Labour Party leader no later than 7 February. There will be a vote in
the coming days to determine her replacement. New Zealand will hold a general
election on 14 October. Ms Ardern, 42, said she had taken time to consider her
future over the summer break. "I had hoped that I would find what I needed
to carry on over that period but, unfortunately, I haven't, and I would be
doing a disservice to New Zealand to continue," she told reporters. Ms
Ardern became the youngest female head of government in the world when she was
elected prime minister in 2017, aged 37. And a year later she became the second
elected world leader to ever give birth while in office. She steered New
Zealand through the Covid-19 pandemic and its ensuing recession, the
Christchurch mosque shootings, and the White Island volcanic eruption. "It's
one thing to lead your country through peace time, it's another to lead them
through crisis," she said. "These events... have been taxing because
of the weight, the sheer weight and continual nature of them. There's never
really been a moment where it's ever felt like we were just governing." Ms
Ardern led the Labour Party to a landslide election victory in 2020, but her
domestic popularity has declined to new lows in recent months, according to
opinion polls. However Ms Ardern said she was not resigning because she
believed Labour could not win the election, but because she thought it would. "We
need a fresh set of shoulders for that challenge," she said. Deputy leader
Grant Robertson said he would not contest the leadership vote, which will occur
on Sunday. If one candidate cannot garner the support of two-thirds of the
party room, the vote will go to Labour's lay membership. Australian Prime
Minister Anthony Albanese paid tribute to Ms Ardern as a leader of intellect,
strength and empathy. "Jacinda has been a fierce advocate for New Zealand,
an inspiration to so many and a great friend to me," he wrote on Twitter. Ms
Ardern listed her government's achievements on climate change, social housing
and reducing child poverty as ones she was particularly proud of. But she said
she hoped New Zealanders would remember her "as someone who always tried
to be kind". "I hope I leave New Zealanders with a belief that you
can be kind, but strong, empathetic but decisive, optimistic but focused. And
that you can be your own kind of leader - one who knows when it's time to
go," she said.
^ This is great to hear. Ardern
turned New Zealand into a Police State during Covid (using a Zero-Covid Policy
similar to Communist China than a Democratic Country.) It will be good to see
her out of power and hopefully, whomever becomes the next Prime Minister (now
or after the General Election in October) will bring back Democracy to New
Zealand. ^
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