NZ opposition leader plays down ‘Jacinda-mania’
REFUGIO PORTALES , Mexican quake survivor WELLINGTON: Opposition leader Jacinda Ardern said yesterday she was taking nothing for granted despite her meteoric rise in the polls, as early voting opened for this month’s general election.
The charismatic 37year-old has electrified the campaign since taking over the centre-left Labour
Party last month, transforming its outlook from near-certain defeat to being narrow favourites in the Sept 23 election.
Labour’s support has surged 20 per- centage points under Ardern in a phenomenon local media have dubbed “Jacinda-mania”. While pundits are comparing her to Canada’s Justin Trudeau and France’s Emmanuel Macron, Ardern insisted she was not buying into the hype.
She said voters could swiftly turn on her in the intensity of an election campaign.
“I’m taking nothing for granted. There’s only 12 days to go and as we’ve seen in a short space of time, a lot can happen,” she told Auckland radio station Newstalk ZB.
“It’s down to the wire and it will be extraordinarily close.”
Ardern has courted the youth vote campaigning on issues, such as free tertiary education, health and housing affordability.
However, the self-described “pragmatic idealist” believes a wide cross-section of voters are interested in her progressive agenda, which also includes pledges on climate change and reducing child poverty.
“It is my generation that’s being affected by that drift most acutely. But having said that, I see parents and grandparents who are as worried about those issues as anyone else,” she said. AFP