The Southland Times

Heavily pregnant PM sails on

- Ruby Nyika ruby.nyika@stuff.co.nz

As her Sunday due date looms, a gumboot-clad Jacinda Ardern strolled through the stalls of Fieldays, a modest bump parting the crowds ahead of her.

A flurry of nonplussed murmurs followed the nation’s first pregnant prime minister in the bastion of rural New Zealand as she breezed through the throngs alongside dozens of camera crews, stallholde­rs and selfieseek­ers.

Some touched her stomach, others asked to deliver her baby.

‘‘I noted you were here,’’ Ardern quipped as she waved to St John staff yesterday morning, a takeaway cup of Zealong green tea in hand.

While she didn’t have any preparatio­ns in place in case she went into labour in a public place – such as Fieldays – she reckoned those around her might.

Staff had put a couple of ‘‘what if’’ contingenc­y plans in place, according to New Zealand National Fieldays Society president Peter Carr.

‘‘I don’t even know about them,’’ Ardern said. ‘‘I wanted to be here, this is a really important fixture in the calendar.

‘‘There’s no doubt, you get to a certain size and things start getting a bit less comfortabl­e. I think most women have experience­d that though.

‘‘Everyone’s personal circumstan­ces are going to be different.

‘‘I acknowledg­e I’ve been quite lucky. Niggles along the way, I’m lucky to not have had that.’’

Most people simply wish her luck, rather than bestow their advice on her, Ardern said.

‘‘I have a strong sense that New Zealanders see this as a life event and not something that’s particular­ly going to affect my job.’’

Keiko Gough managed to place a hand on the prime minister’s stomach as she weaved through the hordes clamouring for photos.

Gough wanted to pray for the baby. ‘‘She will be a good mother,’’ Gough said.

Groups lurked behind the jostling media before weaving between a tangle of cameras to get through to her.

‘‘I’m like, shaking,’’ Waikato University student Megan Gardner said after speaking to Ardern with a group of friends.

‘‘We thanked her for our free fees. She said it’s good to hear and that not many people thank her for that policy.

‘‘She doesn’t care what anyone else thinks, she’s just like, I’m going to be a prime minister and I’m going to be a mother and it doesn’t matter.’’

With Health and Wellbeing Hub and St John stands dotted around, there would be worse places to give birth, the group speculated.

‘‘That would be the best ever,’’ Renee Hanrahan said. ‘‘Gender reveal at the Fieldays.’’

Ardern was happy to see so many younger faces at the inaugural event.

‘‘It’s great now seeing young people coming in legitimate­ly, rather than wagging school.’’

When Ardern visited Rural Health Alliance Aotearoa New Zealand, chair Martin London asked whether he could deliver her baby if she had a Fieldays birth. But there were no labour pangs. There was still an hour of her visit to go, the PM quipped, according to London.

For two hours of endless photos, Ardern beamed and nodded earnestly at stallholde­rs.

‘‘There’s no doubt, you get to a certain size and things start getting a bit less comfortabl­e.

I think most women have experience­d that though.’’

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern

 ?? MARK TAYLOR/ STUFF ?? Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern with partner Clarke Gayford at Fieldays at Mystery Creek, Hamilton, yesterday.
MARK TAYLOR/ STUFF Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern with partner Clarke Gayford at Fieldays at Mystery Creek, Hamilton, yesterday.
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