New Zealand PM confirms decision to quit

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On Friday, a day after New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern stated she had no more in the tank to give, she stated there were no regrets about her plans to quit after a decision that shocked both supporters and critics.

Speaking outside an airport in Napier – where the Labour Party caucus had gathered for a retreat, Ardern added she was feeling a range of emotions from sadness to relief. The polls suggest her party has a difficult path to re-election in October. The prime minister said she would not openly back any likely candidates to replace her.

In response to questions by reporters, she rejected suggestions by some commentators that experiences of misogyny had played a role in her decision. Ms. Ardern said she had a message for women in leadership and girls considering leadership in the future, “you can have a family and be in these roles. You can lead in your style.”

On Thursday, she said she was looking forward to spending more time with her family and being there when her daughter starts school later this year. She will step down by 7 February, and Labour Party MPs will hold a leadership vote on Sunday. If no candidate gets the support of two-thirds of the party, the vote will go to the wider Labour membership.

But Ardern said she expected a successor would be selected on Sunday. Chris Hipkins, who currently holds the education and police portfolios, appears to be the most likely candidate. Hipkins, 44, led the government’s response to the pandemic after being appointed minister for Covid-19 in November 2020.

He later conceded that strict restrictions should have been scaled back sooner. Other potential candidates include Minister of Justice Kiri Allan, 39. If successful, she would become the country’s first prime minister of Maori descent, as well as the first openly gay leader. Michael Wood, 42, the Minister for Transport and Workplace Safety, is also on the list of potential successors.

 

BBC/S.O

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