PRIME MINISTER PREGNANT WITH FIRST CHILD
Prime
minister Jacinda Ardern said on Friday she was pregnant with her first child,
prompting an outpouring of support from women’s rights groups and labour
activists as she declared ‘I’ll be a prime minister and a mum’. Jacinda Kate
Laurell Ardern is a New Zealand politician who has been serving as the 40th
Prime Minister of New Zealand since 26 October 2017
Ardern
said she planned to work until the end of her pregnancy in June and then take
six-weeks leave, during which time deputy prime minister Winston Peters would
run the country.
Speaking
to reporters outside her Auckland home, Ardern said her partner Clarke Gayford
would care for the ‘surprise’ addition full-time and that the whole family
would travel together when necessary.
‘I
am not the first woman to work and have a baby. I know these are special
circumstances but there are many women who have done it well before I have,’
she said.
The
popular 37-year-old politician’s pregnancy is one of the very few examples of
an elected leader holding office while pregnant and the first in New Zealand’s
history. Pakistan’s Benazir Bhutto gave birth while she was prime minister in
1990.
Ardern,
who came to power through a coalition deal after a closely fought election last
year, has experienced a meteoric rise to power as New Zealand’s youngest prime
minister in more than a century, and its third female leader.
Ardern’s
rise to power has generated intense interest in her personal life and drew
comparisons with other youthful leaders such as France’s Emmanuel Macron and
Canada’s Justin Trudeau.
Ardern
was quick to assure the public that she would only take six weeks off, during
which time she would still be contactable, so that the country would run as
usual.
The
short period contrasts with her party’s parental leave policies, with the
Labour-led coalition expanding paid parental leave from 18 to 22 weeks in one of
its first legislative changes. That is set to rise again to 26 weeks in 2020.
She
had no plans to stop work until June and would fly to London in April to attend
a Commonwealth leader’s meeting.
Advocacy
groups and politicians from across the political spectrum were quick to offer
support.
New
Zealand has long held a progressive reputation, having been the first country
to give women the right to vote in 1893.
‘It’s
amazing timing...125 years later we have a prime minister who’s going to give
birth in office,’ said minister for women Julie Anne Genter.
Ardern
revealed on Friday that she had unexpectedly found out she was pregnant on Oct.
13, just six days before she was propelled into the country’s top job when New
Zealand First Party leader Peters announced he was siding with Labour in
post-election negotiations.
When
asked by a reporter how she had managed putting together a government while
suffering from morning sickness, she replied, ‘it’s just what ladies do’.
SOURCE:
REUTERS
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