New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern kicked off
her Labour Party's election campaign Saturday riding high in the opinion polls
after a successful response to the coronavirus outbreak.
Ardern's popularity as preferred prime minister --
often referred to as "Jacindamania" -- topped 60 percent in the
latest surveys following her leadership through the Christchurch mosque
attacks, the White Island volcanic eruption and the pandemic.
Before the virus forced New Zealand to seal its
borders, the polls had pointed to a cliffhanger election on September 19, but
support swung sharply towards the centre-left Labour Party as the country
eliminated community transmission in a matter on months.
In a country of five million people, New Zealand has
had only 22 COVID-19 deaths and it has been 99 days since the last recorded
case of infection from an unknown source.
"When people ask, is this a COVID election, my
answer is yes, it is," the charismatic 40-year-old said as she launched
the campaign with a NZ$311 million (US$205 million) pledge to boost jobs.
"Businesses large and small are crucial to our
economic recovery."
Labour is the senior partner in a three-party
coalition government but if it can maintain the support shown in recent opinion
polls, where it has consistently been above 50 percent, it could govern alone
after the election.
Ardern was an unheralded MP when thrust into the
Labour leadership shortly before the 2017 election when the party was
struggling and "there were plenty who thought it couldn't (win)," she
said.
"If you had told me then that our launch in 2020
would be in the midst of a global pandemic with our borders closed –- I would
have found that very hard to fathom."
The centrepiece of Labour's campaign is to support
businesses in hiring at least 40,000 people whose employment has been affected
by the coronavirus.
It pledged to expand existing job schemes to help
employers hire staff at risk of long-term unemployment.
It will also help out-of-work New Zealanders start a
business through an expanded self-employment programme which will provide the
equivalent of the minimum wage for up to 30-hours a week.
"The new flexi-wage scheme is a key plank of our
economic plan to support businesses to recover and to provide jobs to those who
have lost work due to COVID," Ardern said.
"Our team-of-five-million approach to fighting
COVID means there is huge willingness in our business community to avoid
unemployment rising by retaining staff and taking on new employees where they
can, but many just need a little bit of extra support to do that, which this
package provides."

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.