Kuwait Times

Ardern vows to deliver reform

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WELLINGTON: New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern vowed yesterday to “crack on” with delivering her vision following a landslide election victory, after a string of disasters frustrated reform in her first term. Ardern won a historic outright majority in Saturday’s poll - the first since New Zealand adopted proportion­al voting in 1996 - allowing her to implement policies without support from minor parties.

After facing criticism since winning office in 2017 for not delivering on key promises such as protecting the environmen­t and reducing child poverty, Ardern said she now had a mandate for change. The charismati­c leader said the scale of the victory, Labour’s biggest since 1946, meant more voters were backing her center-left party and its reformist agenda.

“I think they were endorsing the work we’ve done and the plan we have to go forward, and there are some areas we do want to crack on

with,” Ardern said. The 40-year-old, who has been hailed internatio­nally as a standard-bearer for progressiv­e politics, admitted the need to placate minor-party coalition partners “slowed down” reform in her first term.

She also dealt with New Zealand’s worst terrorist attack, a deadly volcanic eruption and the country’s deepest recession in 30 years. In her victory speech late Saturday, Ardern flagged increased state housing, more renewable energy and other infrastruc­ture investment. She also spoke of more training programs, job creation, protecting the environmen­t and a determinat­ion to tackle issues such as climate change, poverty and inequality.

‘COVID election’ Opposition leader Judith Collins conceded voters had given Ardern free rein to implement change, but said that also meant the prime minister could no longer claim her policy failures were caused by reform-shy coalition partners. “The government has got the mandate to do all the things that they’ve promised to do, so they can’t blame anyone else for not delivering,” Collins told reporters.

Campaignin­g during the vote centered on the government’s successful coronaviru­s response, with Ardern dubbing it the “COVID election”. New Zealand has recorded only 25 coronaviru­s deaths in a population of five million, which Collins said boosted Ardern’s standing in an electorate anxious about the pandemic.

 ?? —AFP ?? AUCKLAND: New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern speaks with senior members of parliament a day after her landslide election yesterday.
—AFP AUCKLAND: New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern speaks with senior members of parliament a day after her landslide election yesterday.

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