The New Zealand Herald

Knives come out for new Labour deputy

- Isaac Davison

The National Party has stepped up its attacks on Labour’s new deputy leader, Jacinda Ardern, saying she is interested only in putting her face on billboards and has achieved nothing as an MP.

The often-personal criticism during Parliament’s general debate yesterday was led by Youth Minister Nikki Kaye, whose long rivalry with Ardern was until a week ago a friendly affair.

That changed when Ardern was elected deputy leader on Tuesday last week, and Kaye immediatel­y called out the Labour MP for “flipfloppi­ng” on the pension age and letting down her fellow Gen-Xers.

During the general debate yesterday afternoon, Kaye went further, saying the caucus reshuffle which led to Ardern’s promotion was a “superficia­l, cosmetic facelift”.

Kaye said she “struggled to name anything Jacinda had done” in her time in Parliament — a comment which prompted howls from other MPs in the House.

After Ardern was appointed deputy, Labour leader Andrew Little said she would be the voice of a generation National had neglected.

But Kaye accused her yesterday of being absent during political debates on adoption and superannua­tion in the past week.

“She . . . cut and run on the biggest issue facing our generation,” Kaye said.

“And that is another example of what is a whole lot of photo ops, yep, she’ll be across every billboard, but she absolutely failed our generation on her first day in the job.”

On adoption law reform, Kaye said she had worked with former Green MP Kevin Hague for a year to develop a private member’s bill but Ardern had drafted “a one-line bill telling the Law Commission to write the law for her”.

Kaye’s criticisms were echoed by other National MPs during the debate, suggesting a strategic attack on one of Labour’s biggest weapons.

Conservati­on Minister Maggie Barry also said that Ardern had “achieved almost nothing”.

Ardern was not in the debating chamber at the time, but said she saw the debate on television.

She said she and Kaye had made an agreement when they ran against each other in Auckland Central to talk only about issues and not make personal attacks. “I’ve stuck to that,” Ardern said. Kaye narrowly beat Ardern in Auckland Central in the 2011 and 2014 general elections.

Ardern shifted to the safe Labour seat of Mt Albert for the byelection last month, where she won easily.

Kaye recently returned to Parliament­ary duties after taking leave to get treatment for breast cancer.

 ??  ?? Jacinda Ardern
Jacinda Ardern
 ??  ?? Nikki Kaye
Nikki Kaye

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