The New Zealand Herald

Ardern tackles hard issues

Leader defends KiwiBuild and surplus at first Labour conference in Dunedin in 30 years

- Audrey Young political editor

It was Jacinda Ardern’s first speech to a Labour Party conference as leader and Prime Minister. The public queued around the block to get into the Dunedin Town Hall but hundreds were turned away.

She said it was hard to describe the journey since becoming leader seven weeks before the last election but “frenetic, fascinatin­g, fulfilling” came to mind.

As she announced new funding for 600 dedicated registered teachers to support children with complex learning needs, she read a letter she had received from an aunt of a boy with special needs. It said: “We as a wha¯nau have tried with dead ends wherever we turn so I then turn to you Prime Minister and plead for your help, he is missing out on so much and it just isn’t fair. Please help us find a solution for this young boy who deserves the best chance living with autism.”

Ardern: “So today I want to say to parents, to kids, to teachers, to aunties, to anyone who has asked for more support for those with additional needs — we’ve heard you.”

Ardern also went somewhat on the defensive over two issues which have been criticised by the left — the KiwiBuild programme, which helps the middle class into home ownership, and the surpluses the Government is running. On KiwiBuild she said it was helping thousands of young families into a home “not through a subsidy but the Government using our scale and buying power to do what the market hasn’t”. And again aimed firmly at criticism by the left, she quoted what iconic Labour leader Michael Joseph Savage said when state house tenants were moving into a new home: “We are trying to cater for everyone . . . we do not claim perfection, but we do claim a considerab­le advance on what has been done in the past.”

She also defended the big surpluses. “The surplus is a safety net. Nobody knows what’s around the corner.”

Much of the conference was closed to the media, including a session dubbed Question Time in which delegates asked ministers questions, and another session featuring the Maori Caucus.

A small group of 1080 protesters chanted outside the conference but were not audible from inside.

It has been 30 years since a Labour conference was held in Dunedin. Cheese rolls, a southern classic, were served for afternoon tea.

Ardern spoke briefly on Friday night and then greeted her baby, Neve, in the foyer afterwards by putting a Labour-red knitted hat on her head.

 ?? Photo / Otago Daily Times, Audrey Young (inset) ?? Jacinda Ardern and deputy Kelvin Davis (rear left) greet delegates after the Labour conference. Inset: The PM’s baby Neve wears a Labour-red knitted hat.
Photo / Otago Daily Times, Audrey Young (inset) Jacinda Ardern and deputy Kelvin Davis (rear left) greet delegates after the Labour conference. Inset: The PM’s baby Neve wears a Labour-red knitted hat.
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