The Star Malaysia

New Kiwi opposition chief launches equality campaign

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WELLINGTON: New Zealand’s 37-year-old opposition leader, Jacinda Ardern (pic), officially launched her election campaign pledging her government would be “bold, brave” and tackle rising inequality should it win next month’s election.

Ardern is riding a surge in the polls just three weeks after her appointmen­t to the leadership of the centre-left Labour Party opened up what had been predicted to be a straightfo­rward re-election of the incumbent centre-right government, which has held power for a decade.

New Zealand has been buoyed by some of the strongest economic growth among advanced countries in recent years.

But Ardern said, for many, pay rises did not keep pace with the rising cost of living and the gap between rich and poor was getting more entrenched.

She said she would never question the importance of a strong economy but the difference between the major parties was what “we use as the signs of success”.

“A successful economy is one that serves its people. Not the other way around,” she said in Auckland.

“And that means judging success differentl­y.”

Ardern spoke of the achievemen­ts of former Labour prime ministers and issues that defined them, from free education to the creation of the welfare state.

“For me it’s simple: I want to build a country where every child grows up free from poverty and is filled with hope and opportunit­y,” she said.

Ardern’s speech at the Auckland Town Hall also focused on the environmen­t, saying New Zealand’s rivers were “dying, with the majority almost too dirty to swim in”, adding that climate change was the challenge that “defined her generation”.

She reiterated several of her party’s policies including three years’ free tertiary education, and said her party would “refuse to accept the status quo”.

Ardern had an immediate impact in the polls upon becoming opposition leader, with her party jumping nine points to 33.1%, its highest level since 2014, days after her appointmen­t at the beginning of this month. — Reuters

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