January 19, 2023, Wellington: New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, whose empathetic handling of the nation’s worst mass shooting and response to the COVID pandemic led her to become an international icon. However, she faced mounting criticism at home and said she was leaving office on Thursday.
Fighting back the tears, Ardern told reporters in Napier that Feb. 7 will be her last day as prime minister. “I am entering my sixth year in office, and for each of those years, I have given my absolute all,” she said. She also announced that New Zealand’s next general elections would be held on October 14 and that she would remain a lawmaker until then.
It’s unclear who will take over as prime minister until the election. Deputy Prime Minister Grant Robertson announced he wouldn’t be contesting for the leadership of the Labour Party, throwing the competition open. Ardern described her job as among the most privileged but challenging and said doing it required having a reserve to face the unexpected. She said she no longer had that reserve to serve another term.
She said her time in the office has been fulfilling but challenging. “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, knowing when you are the right person to lead and when you are not. I know what this job takes and that I no longer have enough in the tank to do it justice. It is that simple,” she said.
Ardern had been facing tough election prospects. Her liberal Labour Party won reelection two years ago in a landslide of historic proportions, but recent polls have put her party behind its conservative rivals.
She was lauded globally for her country’s initial handling of the coronavirus pandemic after New Zealand managed to stop the virus at its borders for months. But that zero-tolerance strategy was abandoned once new variants challenged it and vaccines became available.
She faced harsher criticism at home that the strategy was too strict.
Ardern, in December, announced a Royal Commission of Inquiry would look into whether the government made the right decisions in battling COVID-19 and how it can better prepare for future pandemics. Its report is due next year.
In March 2019, Ardern faced one of the darkest days in New Zealand’s history when a white supremacist gunman stormed two mosques in Christchurch and slaughtered 51 people. She was widely praised for embracing the survivors and New Zealand’s Muslim community in the aftermath.