Otago Daily Times

At Harvard, Ardern speaks of need to defend democracy

- BEN MCKAY

CAMBRIDGE: Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has spoken out against the ‘‘scourge of disinforma­tion’’, echoing a call to deepen democracy from former Pakistan prime minister Benazir Bhutto in her Harvard Commenceme­nt address.

Ms Ardern was honoured by the university yesterday when she addressed more than 1000 students from the same commenceme­nt address stage previously offered to leaders of nations and industry including Winston Churchill, Angela Merkel, Steven Spielberg and Oprah Winfrey.

She was also awarded an honorary doctorate from the university.

Ms Ardern received a rapturous reception as she spoke of New Zealand’s gun law reform and abortion decriminal­isation.

Her address was built around the need for democratic systems and informed debate, invoking the same plea from the late Ms Bhutto, who underscore­d the ‘‘fragility’’ of democracy in her own 1989 address.

‘‘This imperfect but precious way that we organise ourselves, that has been created to give equal voice to the weak and to the strong, that is designed to help drive consensus — it is fragile,’’ Ms Ardern said.

‘‘For years it feels as though we have assumed that the fragility of democracy was determined by duration.

‘‘That somehow the strength of your democracy was like a marriage; the longer you’d been in it, the more likely it was to stick.

‘‘But that takes so much for granted.’’

Ms Ardern has walked a similar path to Ms Bhutto; the pair were the first two female heads of government to give birth while in office, Ms Ardern doing so on Ms

Bhutto’s birthday.

The pair met in Switzerlan­d in June 2007, just before Ms Ardern’s election to parliament and seven months before Ms Bhutto was assassinat­ed.

‘‘The path she carved as a woman feels as relevant today as it was decades ago, and so too is the message she shared here in this place,’’ Ms Ardern said.

Ms Ardern updated Ms Bhutto’s call for the 21st century, taking aim at online disinforma­tion and calling on tech companies to do more to stop online conspiracy theories being spread, which can radicalise.

‘‘The time has come for social media companies and other online providers to recognise their power and to act on it,’’ she said.

She finished her speech with a call for kindness, and to bridge difference­s with others.

‘‘What we do as individual­s in these spaces matters,’’ she said.

‘‘We are the richer for our difference, and poorer for our division.’’

Introduced to squeals and applause from the crowd in the Tercentena­ry Theatre, the centre of Harvard’s Yard in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts, Ms Ardern was even clapped during a water break.

‘‘You know it’s a nice crowd when a drink of water elicits applause,’’ she said.

She received another cheer when she explained New Zealand’s

Parliament was 50% women and almost 20% Maori, and her deputy was ‘‘a proud gay man sitting among several other rainbow parliament­arians’’.

But the biggest reception, and standing ovation, came at the mention of New Zealand’s banning of semiautoma­tic weapons, an initiative of Ms Ardern’s Government following the 2019 Christchur­ch mosque attacks.

Gun law reform is again at the forefront of US debate following this week’s massacre of 19 primary schools pupils and two staff in Texas.

As is tradition for commenceme­nt speakers, Ms Ardern was given an honorary degree, made a doctor of laws.

Afterwards, the Labour leader revealed technologi­cal woes plagued her address.

‘‘About every 10 seconds the speech would disappear entirely for about three seconds a time,’’ she said, laughing.

‘‘At a later date when I have managed to get over how stressful that situation was I might take it in a bit.’’

µ After days of uncertaint­y, Ms Ardern has booked a White House meeting with US President Joe Biden.

She had previously been unable to confirm a meeting with Mr Biden, her office citing her recent bout of Covid19 as a complicati­ng factor.

The leaders will now catch up facetoface on Tuesday (US time), when Ms Ardern will also meet vicepresid­ent Kamala Harris.

It is the first trip to the White House for a New Zealand leader since Sir John Key met Barack Obama in 2014, though Ms Ardern held a brief meeting with Donald Trump in 2019 at the United Nations. — AAP

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Among fans . . . New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern poses for a selfie with graduating students at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts yesterday.
PHOTO: REUTERS Among fans . . . New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern poses for a selfie with graduating students at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts yesterday.

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