Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern photographed on June 10, 2022. (Photo: Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images)
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern photographed on June 10, 2022. (Photo: Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images)

PoliticsJanuary 19, 2023

‘For me, it’s time’: Jacinda Ardern’s resignation speech in full

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern photographed on June 10, 2022. (Photo: Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images)
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern photographed on June 10, 2022. (Photo: Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images)

Ardern today announced she is stepping down as prime minister before February 7, 2023. This is what she said.

Good afternoon.

Today I have two important announcements to make.

The first is the election date.

Under the last government, the practice began of sharing the election date at the beginning of election year.

Early announcements allow for planning and preparation by the Electoral Commission, agencies, and political parties, and is, I believe, best practice. That’s why in 2020 we announced at the beginning of election year, and I do so again today.

The general election for 2023 will be held on Saturday the 14th of October.

In setting this date, I have considered the advice of the Electoral Commission, public holidays and school holidays, the advance voting periods, and important events and fixtures. I believe this date best accommodates each of these factors.

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Consideration of the date over the summer, and the impending election and new political term has also given me time for reflection.

I am entering now my sixth year in office. And for each of those years, I have given my absolute all.

I believe that leading a country is the most privileged job anyone could ever have, but also one of the more challenging. You cannot, and should not do it unless you have a full tank, plus, a bit in reserve for those unexpected challenges.

This summer, I had hoped to find a way to prepare for not just another year, but another term – because that is what this year requires. I have not been able to do that.

And so today, I am announcing that I will not be seeking re-election and that my term as prime minister will conclude no later than the 7th of February.

This has been the most fulfilling five and a half years of my life. But it has also had its challenges.

Amongst an agenda focused on housing, child poverty and climate change, we encountered a major biosecurity incursion, a domestic terror event, a major natural disaster, a global pandemic and an economic crisis. The decisions that had to be made have been continual, and they have been weighty.

But I am not leaving because it was hard. Had that been the case I probably would have departed two months into the job!

I am leaving because with such a privileged role, comes responsibility. The responsibility to know when you are the right person to lead, and also, when you are not.

I know what this job takes, and I know that I no longer have enough in the tank to do it justice. It is that simple.

But I absolutely believe, and know, there are others around me who do.

We achieved a huge amount in the last five years.  And I am so proud of that.

We are in a fundamentally different place on climate change than where we were, with ambitious targets and a plan to achieve them.

We have turned around child poverty statistics and made the most significant increases in welfare and the state housing stock we’ve seen in many decades.

We’ve made it easier to access education and training, improved the pay and conditions of workers, and shifted our settings towards a high wage, high skilled economy.

And we’ve worked hard to make progress on issues around our national identity, and I believe that teaching history in schools and celebrating our own indigenous national holiday will all make a difference for years to come.

And we’ve done that while responding to some of the biggest threats to the health and economic wellbeing of our nation arguably since World War Two.

The team that has done all that, they have been some of the best people I have ever had the privilege of working with, and they are well placed to take us forward as we continue to focus on our economic recovery with one of the strongest economies in the world.

They are also a team who are incredibly well placed to contest the next election. In fact, I am not leaving because I believe we can’t win the election, but because I believe we can and will, and we need a fresh set of shoulders for that challenge.

I know there will be much discussion in the aftermath of this decision as to what the so called “real” reason was. I can tell you, that what I am sharing today is it.

The only interesting angle you will find is that after going on six years of some big challenges, that I am human. Politicians are human. We give all that we can, for as long as we can, and then it’s time.

And for me, it’s time.

I intend to remain the member for Mt Albert through till April. This will give me a bit of time in the electorate before I depart, and also spare them and the country a byelection.

Beyond that, I have no plan. No next steps. All I know is that whatever I do, I will try and find ways to keep working for New Zealand and that I am looking forward to spending time with my family again – arguably, they are the ones that have sacrificed the most out of all of us.

And so to Neve, Mum is looking forward to being there when you start school this year.

And to Clarke, let’s finally get married.

As for the next Labour leader. The caucus has seven days to ascertain whether one individual holds more than 2/3rds of the caucus support.

Caucus has today agreed that a vote will occur in three days’ time on Sunday the 22nd of January. If a leader is successfully elected, I will issue my resignation soon after to the governor general, and a new prime minister will be sworn in.

If no one is able to garner this level of support within caucus, the leadership contest will go to the wider membership.

My opportunity to thank the many people I need to, will likely come in April when I depart Parliament, 15 years after having been sworn in.

Till then, I see my role to help the Labour Party, who I consider my family, navigate this next phase. And then, to leave the next colleague who takes on this role, all the space they need to make their mark.

For my part, I want to finish with a simple thank you to New Zealanders for giving me this opportunity to serve, and to take on what has and will always be the greatest role in my life.

I hope in return I leave behind a belief that you can be kind, but strong. Empathetic, but decisive. Optimistic, but focused.

That you can be your own kind of leader – one that knows when it’s time to go.

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National party leader Chris Luxon speaks at East Pier in Napier. (Photo by Kerry Marshall/Getty Images)
National party leader Chris Luxon speaks at East Pier in Napier. (Photo by Kerry Marshall/Getty Images)

PoliticsJanuary 19, 2023

National’s new mantra? It’s a lot like Let’s Do This

National party leader Chris Luxon speaks at East Pier in Napier. (Photo by Kerry Marshall/Getty Images)
National party leader Chris Luxon speaks at East Pier in Napier. (Photo by Kerry Marshall/Getty Images)

Christopher Luxon looked full of confidence, but faces criticism for comparing crime in New Zealand with ‘the southside of Chicago’.

For today at least, Napier is part of Caucus Bay. Confirming that the political gods are in mischievous mood for election year, both of the big political parties are holding their summer retreats in the city, bringing more MPs to a location outside Wellington at once for the first time since, I don’t know, maybe ever?

Apart from the team-building, strategy plotting and wine-tasting, each party leader uses the caucus retreat for the first media set-piece, hoping to create a positive early impression with the public. That’s true every January; triple it in election year. 

On that score, Christopher Luxon was a picture of confidence this morning. In a speech to MPs, supporters and media he sought to project optimism while scowling gravely at the state of the economy, squaring that circle by telling everyone, time after time, how New Zealand is the best country on the planet – trouble is, it’s “heading in the wrong direction”. That’s an assertion supported by polling – just. In the last survey by Talbot Mills, completed in November, the number of people who thought the country was on the “wrong track” rose from 46% to 49%, with those picking “right track” dropping by about the same margin to 41%.

Luxon attempted to channel the dissatisfaction less in a tone of anger than disappointment – condescension even. As if to say, this Labour group tried their hardest, poor lambs, but have proved victims of their own ineptitude and ideological blinkers. 

The remainder of Luxon’s speech majored on the economy, and a pledge to be “single-mindedly focused on a clear set of priorities”. He specified four: reducing the cost of living and an “inflation fighting plan”; a “five point plan” for prosperity and growth; a law and order plan to stop New Zealand becoming “southside Chicago” (on which more later); and, finally, a focus on education and health frontline services, with a focus on outcomes. 

Luxon’s speech followed the announcement earlier in the day of what he called a “limited reshuffle”, and so it was. It was a good reshuffle for people who were leader of the National Party in July 2020, with Judith Collins rewarded for assiduous work in her science and technology portfolio – by gaining more responsibilities and leaping up the ranks from 18th to 10th.

Todd Muller, meanwhile, adds climate change to agriculture and moves up to 12th. Muller has previously worked constructively on climate change policy with James Shaw – the twinning of agriculture and climate change will make him an important figure in the passage and ongoing viability of the He Waka Eke Noa scheme to bring farming into the emissions scheme.

Another change of note is the return of an “Auckland” portfolio, with Simeon Brown adding responsibility for Super City issues to his existing transport role. Labour has previously had an Auckland issues minister (Judith Tizard) and, in opposition, spokespeople; there is an argument for the government, too, to formally give someone responsibility for the city. 

The elephant in the reshuffle announcement was Barbara Kuriger, who lost the agriculture portfolio after it emerged she had used her parliamentary letterhead to lobby and upbraid officials in the interests of her son, who faces animal mistreatment charges. Kuriger says she won’t be quitting parliament. Luxon says he won’t rule out a return to a senior role for the Taranaki King Country MP if she can “demonstrate she has the judgment”.

Reality landed for Luxon in the press stand-up, where he faced questions straight off the bat about drawing comparisons between crime in New Zealand and the “southside of Chicago”, where violent crime including homicide is rampant. That line followed assurances earlier in the day that National would pursue a clean campaign. Luxon dismissed suggestions such rhetorical devices amounted to “fear-mongering” or “Trump-like” tactics. If the Chicago line ends up high in the TV news, however, plenty of National supporters would be delighted.  

He was further grilled on the Kuriger situation, his willingness to work with New Zealand First and the lack of policy (on the latter two, the answer is: tell you later). He faced questions, too, on a broiling controversy around the candidate selection in the Hawke’s Bay electorate Tukituki. That Cameron “Whaleoil” Slater and Simon Lusk, stars of National Party Punch and Judy psychodramas of the past, are involved is a mixed blessing for Luxon and the new party president, Sylvia Wood. Yes, it is an unwelcome resurfacing of Dirty Politics storylines; on the other hand, it is easier to dismiss as histrionics from old ghosts who no longer hold any sway as far as the National leadership is concerned. “That era of dirty politics is well behind the National Party,” said Luxon today.

As far as the rest of the year is concerned, meanwhile, the mantra is clear enough. In 2017, under new leader Jacinda Ardern, the slogan was Let’s Do This. What is the National Party 2023 version of that? Imagine Let’s Do This but spoken with a grudging realist tone, as if staring at a house that needed rapid repainting after a botched job and you get the mantra, delivered at least half a dozen times in Luxon’s speech and the introduction from his deputy, Nicola Willis: Let’s Get This Done.


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