The Borneo Post (Sabah)

English makes strong start in early NZ election count

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WELLINGTON: New Zealand’s conservati­ve Prime Minister Bill English raced to a strong start in early election counting yesterday, although the figures still gave opposition leader Jacinda Ardern a realistic prospect of forming government.

With 20 per cent of the vote counted, support for English’s National Party was 46.1 per cent, while Ardern’s centre-left Labour was on 36.3, with New Zealand First (NZF) at 7.1 and the Green 6.1.

The major parties must forge coalitions to reach a majority under New Zealand’s proportion­al voting system, meaning English would still need support from maverick Winston Peters’ NZF to form government.

Ardern could also get over the line by tea ming up with the Green and NZF, confirming Peters’ is likely to play kingmaker during this election.

“My guess is that this will be a government decided by Winston,” former Labour Party president Mike Williams told TVNZ.

National campaign director Steven Joyce said the early figures were encouragin­g for English but it was far too early to see how the election would play out.

The early results are mainly advance votes cast in the two weeks before election day and Labour MP Phil Twyford said that made them hard to predict.

“We’d have probably hoped to have done a bit better but it’s still early days, there’s a lot of these advance votes ... so I’d wait a bit longer before drawing to many conclusion­s,” he told TVNZ.

The campaign has been the most volatile in recent memory, with momentum swinging from English to Ardern and then back again.

No party has claimed a majority government in New Zealand’s 120-seat parliament since proportion­al voting was adopted in 1996 and this election is unlikely to change that.

Peters, a populist antiimmigr­ation campaigner, had given no indication of which party he would support.

Ardern was hoping for a high youth vote to counter her dip in the polls in the final week of campaignin­g and visited universiti­es across the country encouragin­g students to cast their ballots.

“This is going to come down to whether or not people turn out and vote,” she said Friday.

English’s National Party was in the driving seat to win a fourth term until Ardern took over the Labour Party last month.

The 37-year-old galvanised support for the ailing centreleft party, giving it a 20-point popularity boost to bring it level with National.

Arden accused the government of inertia, saying that after three terms it has run out of ideas on issues such as housing affordabil­ity and protecting the environmen­t.

Her policy platform includes free tertiary education and slashing immigratio­n to reduce pressure on housing and infrastruc­ture.

Ardern is bidding to become New Zealand’s youngest leader since 1856 and only the third woman to lead the South Pacific nation of 4.6 million people.

But the “Jacinda-mania” phenomenon waned as English attacked her financial credibilit­y while pointing to his economic record over the past nine years.

The 55-year-old ex-farmer and father-of-six, who took over as prime minister when John Key stepped down last December, argued only National can maintain strong economic growth.

English also wants to make amends for his last leadership foray in 2002, when National slumped to a record defeat and won barely 20 per cent of the vote.

While tipping a close race, he is confident National can win a fourth term, a feat no New Zealand government has achieved in more than 50 years.

The wildcard for both English and Ardern is Peters, whose party could decide the outcome of the election if it is as tight as polls predict.

The 72-year-old political veteran has shown in the past that he will back either side if the right offer is made.

In 1996, he helped install a National-led government in return for being made deputy prime minister, then in 2005 he joined a Labour coalition after being given the job of foreign minister. — AFP

 ??  ?? A file combo of English (left) and Ardern taken in Wellington. — AFP photo
A file combo of English (left) and Ardern taken in Wellington. — AFP photo

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