Friday, September 22, 2023

After Jacinda Ardern, a ‘Scary Time’ for Women in New Zealand Politics

THE NEW YORK TIMES: Three years after Ms. Ardern won a resounding victory for her Labour Party, the nation will vote in a very different political landscape.

Jacinda Ardern giving her last speech in New Zealand’s Parliament, in Wellington, in April. | Mark Coote/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

The last time New Zealanders voted in a general election, they were choosing between two women who were self-professed feminists. Three years later, in a sign of how sharply the pendulum has swung, they will pick between two men named Chris.

Ahead of next month’s polls, and 130 years after New Zealand became the first country to grant women the vote, the political landscape is in many ways unrecognizable from the era of former Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, whose pursuit of women’s rights and gun control transformed her country’s image abroad.

Issues like pay equity, child poverty and the prevention of domestic violence and harassment have seldom featured in the current campaign. Female politicians across the spectrum now say they face extraordinary abuse from a misogynistic and sometimes scary slice of the population. Some women say they did not seek office because of safety fears. » | Natasha Frost | Friday, September 22, 2023