Manawatu Standard

PM introduces baby Neve to country

- Stuff reporters

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has introduced her newborn daughter to the world, and revealed her name: Neve Te Aroha Ardern Gayford.

Ardern, partner Clarke Gayford and baby Neve appeared at Auckland City Hospital for a press conference at 11am yesterday. They then headed home to Sandringha­m.

Ardern said, like most new parents, she and Gayford ‘‘went through the struggle’’ of choosing a name for their baby.

‘‘We chose Neve because we just liked it, and when we met her she just looked like she suited the name,’’ she said.

Neve means ‘‘bright’’ and ‘‘radiant’’, as well as ‘‘snow’’, which Ardern said seemed like a ‘‘good combinatio­n’’ for Matariki and the winter solstice, which was when the baby was born.

Te Aroha was chosen to reflect the ‘‘love and generosity’’ shown to the baby, especially by iwi who gifted names to the family.

‘‘It’s also the place where all my family are from and I grew up under that mountain,’’ Ardern said. She joked she and Gayford had ‘‘gone for simplicity’’ with the spelling of ‘‘Neve’’, ‘‘because Clarke with an ‘e’ has caused all sorts of problems, and Jacinda with a ‘d’.’’

Ardern said the family was doing well – ‘‘sleep-deprived, but super well’’. She thanked staff at the hospital for their care, as well as all the New Zealanders who had sent messages of support and handmade gifts.

‘‘Those moments have mattered as much to us as any of those lovely messages of support from around the world.’’

Gayford said he would never forget the look on Ardern’s face when she held their daughter for the first time. ‘‘It was all a bit of a blur for the both of us ... she looked absolutely just stunned and very, very happy.’’

Ardern is taking six weeks of maternity leave before returning to Parliament, when Gayford will care for the baby fulltime.

And he’s got the cardigan to prove he is ready for life as a stayat-home dad.

At the end of a video Ardern posted yesterday, she calls her partner over. ‘‘Clarke’s got his dad cardie on, which means he’s ready to go,’’ she said.

‘‘Finally it’s come of age,’’ Gayford said.

He revealed he bought the grey cardigan with a black pattern at an op shop in Gisborne.

The couple announced their baby’s arrival on Instagram on Thursday evening.

‘‘Welcome to our village wee one,’’ Ardern wrote.

After a sleepless first night at the hospital, her press secretary announced she would stay on the maternity ward for another night. On Saturday, it was announced she would remain there for a third night due to the security requiremen­ts involved in transferri­ng to nearby Birthcare.

Ardern’s mother, Laurell Ardern, reported on Saturday evening the baby girl had dark hair and dark eyes.

Neve looked more like her father than her mother, the proud grandmothe­r said.

‘‘I think there might be a bit of Clarke . . . she doesn’t look like Jacinda as a baby, because she’s more tiny. [Jacinda] didn’t look tired at all. She looked good.’’

‘‘She doesn’t look like Jacinda asa baby, because she’s more tiny.’’

Grandmothe­r Laurell Ardern

New Zealand could join Australia in the weird and wonderful music extravagan­za of Eurovision.

The idea was floated during the visit of European Union (EU) trade commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom this week, who was here to officially launch trade talks between New Zealand and the European trading bloc.

Malmstrom – one of the most powerful leaders in the European Commission, the body that negotiates trade for the EU – came to discuss the potential opportunit­ies a trade deal would bring, along with medicine patents, agricultur­e as well as the labelling of cheese.

During her visit, she was asked whether New Zealand could join the long-running Eurovision Song Contest. She replied: ‘‘I think we should give this serious considerat­ion.’’

Malmstrom has referred to Australia’s recent membership to the contest as ‘‘momentous’’. Yesterday, she told TVNZ’S

Q+A show that New Zealand would be ‘‘very welcome’’.

‘‘I don’t know the formal procedures for that – it’s beyond my pay grade – but I’m happy to look it up for you.’’

 ?? ABIGAIL DOUGHERTY/STUFF ?? Neve Te Aroha Ardern Gayford with her parents, Jacinda Ardern and Clarke Gayford (in his ‘‘dad cardie’’), at a press conference at Auckland City Hospital yesterday, before the family went home.
ABIGAIL DOUGHERTY/STUFF Neve Te Aroha Ardern Gayford with her parents, Jacinda Ardern and Clarke Gayford (in his ‘‘dad cardie’’), at a press conference at Auckland City Hospital yesterday, before the family went home.
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 ?? AP PHOTO ?? Israel’s Netta Barzilai celebrates after winning the 2018 Eurovision Song Contest in Portugal. European Union trade commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom has suggested New Zealand consider joining the annual event.
AP PHOTO Israel’s Netta Barzilai celebrates after winning the 2018 Eurovision Song Contest in Portugal. European Union trade commission­er Cecilia Malmstrom has suggested New Zealand consider joining the annual event.

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