Kiwi PM says wallet to decide election
Wellington, Sept . 15: New Zealand Prime Minister Bill English on Friday declared his election rival Jacinda Ardern’s political honeymoon was over and said voters were now more concerned about “money in their pocket”.
Ms Ardern has enjoyed a spectacular rise since taking over the centreleft Labour Party last month, lifting its vote 20 percentage points to turn the September 23 election into a cliffhanger.But recent polls have showed the 37-year-old’s gains have stalled and Mr English said voters were no longer enamoured with what he has called the “stardust” that initially appealed to the electorate.
Mr English, who is seeking a recordequalling fourth term for the conservative National Party, said voters’ minds were turning to more practical matters as the campaign enters its final week.
“I think the public are coming to that point where the interest
in the Labour leadership change has gone,” he told reporters on the hustings in Wellington.
“Now they’re looking hard at what’s going to work for them and
what’s going to put money in their pocket.”
Mr English has campaigned hard on his economic record, arguing his party guided New Zealand through the global financial crisis and has maintained strong growth.
He said that key Ardern policies such as free tertiary education would squander a budget surplus built up over years of financial restraint.”Change... Increasingly looks like quite a risk,” he said. Meanwhile, Ms Ardern was campaigning in the South Island city of Dunedin.