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The Walls Are Closing In On the Left Bullshit Lying Media

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Author Topic: The Walls Are Closing In On the Left Bullshit Lying Media  (Read 340 times)
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Kiwithrottlejockey
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« on: August 03, 2018, 12:26:55 pm »


from The New York Times…

Jacinda Ardern Embraces Dual Role: New Zealand Prime Minister and Mom

New Zealand's prime minister, back from six weeks' maternity leave, told reporters
to expect “the odd press conference with a little bit of spill on me.”


By CHARLOTTE GRAHAM-McLAY |  — Thursday, August 02, 2018

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern of New Zealand and her partner, Clarke Gayford, with their daughter, Neve, at their home in Auckland on Tuesday. — Photograph: Derek Henderson/Jacinda Ardern/via Associated Press.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern of New Zealand and her partner, Clarke Gayford, with their daughter, Neve, at their home in Auckland on Tuesday.
 — Photograph: Derek Henderson/Jacinda Ardern/via Associated Press.


WELLINGTON, NEW ZEALAND — Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern of New Zealand returned to work on Thursday, six weeks after she gave birth to her first child, saying that she would not pretend she was superhuman or “hide the imperfections” of parenting.

The prime minister has become something of a trailblazer on the gender and parenting front, becoming only the second sitting world leader to give birth while in office (Benazir Bhutto of Pakistan was the first, in 1990). But Ms. Ardern said she was prepared to juggle her dual responsibilities.

“I might be at the odd press conference with a little bit of spill on me,” she told reporters, adding that she and her family would “make it work.” She told Newshub that while it would have been “lovely to have more time” off on parental leave, “these were not normal circumstances.”

Ms. Ardern, 38, has been on parental leave since she delivered her daughter, Neve Gayford, on June 21.

After spending her first day back at work conducting interviews with reporters at her home in New Zealand's largest city, Auckland, Ms. Ardern said she and her family would move to the prime minister's residence in the capital, Wellington, on Saturday.

Ms. Ardern came to power last October, promising a government that would “bring kindness back,” particularly for vulnerable New Zealanders. She announced her pregnancy in January, noting then that she would not be the first woman “to work and have a baby,” nor the first to multi-task.

She became leader of the center-left Labour Party a year ago, and turned around the fortunes of the ailing party with a youthful, charismatic campaign. Reporters coined the term “Jacindamania” to describe the fervor of her supporters. Ms. Ardern made global headlines after she batted away questions from interviewers about whether she planned to have children if she became prime minister.

“I'm not going to pretend that I have the same lot as every other woman,” Ms. Ardern told Radio New Zealand on Thursday, adding that she was in a “very, very lucky” and “privileged” position.

Her partner, Clarke Gayford, 40, will now become a stay-at-home parent, “not a babysitter,” she said.

She made her remarks in a round of interviews with New Zealand media outlets, who all agreed not to post their stories until 5 p.m. New Zealand time. That carefully calibrated rollout also included the release of pictures of Ms. Ardern and Mr. Gayford with their baby that were provided by Ms. Ardern's office. Her spokesman said no further pictures of the prime minister's daughter would be made available.


Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern of New Zealand, second from left, and her partner, Clarke Gayford, left, with their baby daughter, Neve Te Aroha Ardern Gayford, at Auckland City Hospital on June 24. — Photograph: Michael Bradley/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images.
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern of New Zealand, second from left, and her partner, Clarke Gayford, left, with their baby daughter, Neve Te Aroha Ardern Gayford,
at Auckland City Hospital on June 24. — Photograph: Michael Bradley/Agence France-Presse/Getty Images.


After Ms. Ardern's child was born, former Prime Minister Helen Clark — a mentor to Ms. Ardern — wrote in The Guardian that “no doors are closed to women.”

Ms. Ardern agreed, but said Thursday that her responsibilities were still a balancing act, “and there is guilt behind every door.”

“I do not have a monopoly on guilt,” she said about her dual role. “Women from all walks of life will feel to some degree like if they place more emphasis on this area, they are sacrificing something else over here.”

Saying she would “gift all women the absence of guilt” if she could, Ms. Ardern said she hoped one day women would be able to “make choices and feel satisfied with doing the best we can, both in the workplace and with our families.”

While she said she was conscious of the intense international interest surrounding her motherhood, she said she hoped some day her situation would not be seen as unusual.

“There's this overlay of interest in something that is mundane, something that every parent has gone through,” she told TVNZ, about her life of “feeding, sleeping and nappies.”

“I absolutely accept this layer of interest because it's not our normal yet,” she said. “But one day it will be.”

Ms. Ardern has asked that her child not be photographed on Parliament grounds, where Mr. Gayford and Neve will spend much of their time. Before Ms. Ardern announced her pregnancy, the government had already moved to make Parliament more friendly for parents.

At least five New Zealand lawmakers who were elected or returned to Parliament after September's election were parents of babies under a year old. While breast-feeding in the debating chamber is not a new occurrence, the ban on children in the parliamentary swimming pool has been lifted, and a weekly parent-child swimming time has been instituted.

Ms. Ardern told TVNZ that her daughter and Mr. Gayford will travel with her to New York next month, where she will visit the United Nations General Assembly.

While she was on leave, the deputy prime minister, Winston Peters, who is the leader of a minor political party, assumed her role. Challenges facing the center-left government in that time have included the first strike action by New Zealand's nurses in three decades. Their union is calling for better pay, staffing and working conditions.

Elementary-school teachers are expected to strike later this month, also over pay.

Ms. Ardern said Mr. Peters had done “a great job” in her absence.


__________________________________________________________________________

• Charlotte Graham-McLay is a journalist who is a special correspondent to The New York Times and lives in Wellington, New Zealand. Since 2006, she has worked at Radio New Zealand in a variety of roles, including presenter, editor, producer, reporter, and social journalist. She has also reported from Hong Kong and New Zealand for The New York Times. As well as Radio NZ and The N.Y. Times, her writing appears in New Zealand Geographic, Landfall, The Spinoff, and The Wireless. Charlotte holds a Masters in Journalism, for which she studied the impact of gendered online harassment on high profile women broadcasters. Charlotte's creative writing previously won the Best Undergraduate Portfolio prize at Wellington, NZ's Victoria University's International Institute of Modern Letters. She has taught journalism and public relations, and worked in the youth and social enterprise sectors. She has an ATCL in speech and drama, and sometimes teaches ballet.

__________________________________________________________________________

Related to this topic:

 • New Zealand’s Nurses Plan Walkout, Testing Jacinda Ardern's Government

 • New Zealand's Leader, Jacinda Ardern, Introduces Baby Daughter

 • New Zealand's Leader, Jacinda Ardern, Delivers a Baby Girl

 • New Zealand's Election Had Been Predictable. Then ‘Jacindamania’ Hit.


https://www.nytimes.com/2018/08/02/world/asia/jacinda-ardern-maternity-leave-new-zealand.html
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