Gulf Today

A leader who is upfront and politicall­y savvy

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New Zealand’s new prime minister does not draw adoring crowds like his predecesso­r Jacinda Ardern, but is well known throughout the country for his political nous, poor dress sense and a love of diet Coke. Chris Hipkins, 44, was on Wednesday morning officially sworn in to replace Ardern, his friend of more than 20 years, who resigned because she no longer had “enough in the tank”. “This is the biggest privilege and responsibi­lity of my life,” Hipkins said ater formally taking office. “I’m energised and excited by the challenges ahead.” The straight-talking Hipkins was the architect of New Zealand’s Covid-19 response, and is widely seen as a personable politician with a safe pair of hands.

“Hopefully New Zealanders know me as someone who is upfront, doesn’t mind admitting when they’ve made a mistake and can laugh at themselves,” he told reporters ater being touted for the role last week. Hipkins has somewhat mellowed since his early days as a firebrand of student politics.

He was arrested and strip-searched in the late 1990s while protesting proposed reforms to university education. He will now be tasked with turning around the sagging popularity of Ardern’s Labour government, which has been hampered by a looming recession and a resurgent conservati­ve opposition. Hipkins won plaudits for his near two-year term as the Covid response minister in a country that shut its borders to keep the coronaviru­s out, only fully reopening to the outside world in August last year.

Hailing from the working class Hut Valley in New Zealand’s North Island, Hipkins has held high-profile porfolios including police and education.

“My parents came from relatively humble beginnings and worked really hard to provide a good life for my brother and I.”

His diet has drawn the atention of his colleagues, with a former boss once remarking that Hipkins “appears to eat nothing more than sausage rolls and diet Coke”. Justice Minister Kiri Allan, one of Labour’s senior Maori MPS, who had been considered a potential prime minister herself, has described Hipkins as decisive and an “incredibly strong” leader.

“He is extremely competent, with a track record of delivering for New Zealand as one of our most senior ministers over the past six years,” she said. He famously appeared before media ater Ardern’s resignatio­n wearing a faded cap, dark sunglasses and a baggy sweatshirt.

The ensemble is currently being auctioned for charity, where it has been billed as a musthave for “fashionist­as and political tragics alike”.

The incoming New Zealand leader studied politics and criminolog­y at Victoria University in the capital Wellington and then worked in the industry training sector. Before becoming an MP in 2008, he worked as a senior adviser to two education ministers and former prime minister Helen Clark. Although known as a personable and laid-back operator, Hipkins is also capable of playing hard-nosed politics, and was involved in some high-profile spats with Australia’s former conservati­ve government.

In 2021, he accused Australia of “exporting its garbage” to New Zealand — a reference to Canberra’s controvers­ial policy of deporting criminals back to their country of birth. Hipkins was admonished by Ardern in 2017 ater he was accused of orchestrat­ing the resignatio­n of Australia’s then-deputy prime minister, Barnaby Joyce. Informatio­n released to Hipkins showed Joyce was a dual citizen of both Australia and New Zealand — which disqualifi­ed him from siting in parliament under Australia’s constituti­on.

Meanwhile, hundreds gathered to applaud Jacinda Ardern as she let New Zealand’s parliament to resign as prime minister on Wednesday, before Chris Hipkins was switly sworn in as her replacemen­t. Ardern said last week she no longer had “enough in the tank” ater steering the country through natural disasters, its worstever terror atack and the Covid-19 pandemic. Hipkins was sworn in by Governor-general Cindy Kiro during a ceremony in the capital Wellington, saying he was “energised and excited by the challenges ahead”.

The 44-year-old is now tasked with reversing the government’s sagging popularity, which has been hampered by a deteriorat­ing economy and a resurgent conservati­ve opposition. Ardern made her last public appearance as prime minister earlier on Wednesday, walking out of the distinctiv­e Beehive parliament building as hundreds of staff and onlookers broke into a spontaneou­s round of applause.

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