HomeMy WebLinkAbout2023_01_22 JKunzler_NZ similaritiesFrom:Joe A. Kunzler
To:Allison Berry; Board of Health; Greg Brotherton
Subject:NZ simiarities with our situation and...
Date:Sunday, January 22, 2023 10:15:39 PM
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I won't spell out the obvious, but I'm sure you will concur there are eerie similarities with
our situation here.
I'm grateful we have Dr. Berry. I greatly appreciate Dr. Berry, MD, calling out the sheerloss of life that would occur if we went the way of some unpatriotic public commentators.
Frankly speaking, there is a lot of symbolism of me leaving an Ebey's NHR Open House tocall out some of the regular trolls as unpatriotic. Ten years ago, some of us who supportthe Navy's flight operations at OLF Coupeville started calling out the noise whiners as..."unpatriotic". Weird how protesting public health insisting on basic measures to protect ourfellow Americans makes some feel patriotic when nothing could be further from the truth. Time the Far Right got their own medicine to inhale.
JOE SENDS
https://s2.washingtonpost.com/camp-rw/?trackId=5f0a707f9bbc0f3a787e168b&s=63ce15dcef9bf67b236d5e41&linknum=4&linktot=71
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By Ishaan Tharoor
with Sammy Westfall
Email
The many legacies of Jacinda Ardern
New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern attends a news conference in Sydney with Australian Prime
Minister Anthony Albanese on July 8. (Rick Rycroft/AP)
The announced resignation of New Zealand Prime Minister
Jacinda Ardern was perhaps more a shock to her admirers
abroad than her compatriots at home. For much of her more than
half decade in power, Ardern seemed a leader whose stature on the world
stage belied the relative smallness of her nation and the vagaries of its
parliamentary politics. She was a champion of the 21st century center left:
a staunch defender of pluralism and tolerance within her own society and
elsewhere, an advocate for climate action, and a global feminist icon. The
example of her charisma and capacity for empathy led to a phenomenon
that swept the world: Jacindamania.
At home, though, Ardern’s reputation was more mixed, and her decision to
quit the post followed a turbulent last two years in office. Her maneuvering
in the wake of a global pandemic and decision to impose vaccination
mandates in certain contexts stoked an angry backlash from some corners
of the electorate. Violent protests rocked New Zealand’s customarily placid
political scene and the prime minister became the target of a wave of anti-
establishment hate, some of it rooted in online misinformation and offline
misogyny.
And so Ardern, 42, reckoned that it was better to remove herself from the
firing line. “I know what this job takes,” she said at an emotional news
conference last week. “And I know that I no longer have enough in the tank
to do it justice.”
On Sunday, Ardern’s Labour Party selected Education Minister Chris
Hipkins as the party’s new leader. He’s expected to assume Ardern’s post
by Wednesday. The leadership reshuffle does have a pragmatic purpose,
helping the ruling party reposition itself ahead of upcoming elections
where the center-right opposition may come ahead.
“Ardern has become an increasingly polarizing figure,” wrote Richard
Shaw, a professor of politics at Massey University in New Zealand. “By
stepping aside now she gives her party plenty of time to install a new
leadership group that can draw a line under the past three years and focus
on the future.”
For a time, Ardern could do no wrong. She attracted worldwide
attention as only the second modern world leader to give birth while in
office in 2018; not long thereafter, she brought her infant to the floor of the
U.N. General Assembly, a recognition of the demands placed on all
working mothers. Her cabinet after winning reelection in 2020 was the
most diverse in New Zealand’s history, comprising 40 percent women, 25
percent people of Maori background and 15 percent people from the
country’s LGBTQ community.
In 2019, New Zealand was rocked by a far-right terrorist attack on two
mosques in the city of Christchurch, which saw a white nationalist gunman
kill 51 people. Ardern’s immediate response was to rush to the community,
don a hijab out of respect to its customs and comfort the mourners. She
was the face of a nation’s sorrow and grief, and then also its resolve. Her
government pushed through significant gun control legislation, and Ardern
herself led a global effort to counter against online extremism and hate.
When the pandemic hit the following year, Ardern made New Zealand into
the world’s preeminent “zero covid” success story. Sure, the island nation
was blessed by its geographic remoteness, but even later as border controls
were relaxed and the virus spread, no country in the Western world had a
lower covid death rate. That was in part because of a successful
immunization drive carried out by Ardern’s government.
The many crises that hit during Ardern’s tenure, and her capacity to
manage them, are a defining element of her legacy. “In each disaster the
prime minister acted decisively — from banning semiautomatic weapons
and reforming firearms law to implementing a world-leading alert level
system to crush covid-19 outbreaks,” wrote academic Morgan Godfery in
the Guardian. “The speed at which these disasters would arrive, and the
equally speedy response, makes it feel as if the short five-year period the
prime minister was in power was actually an age.”
Her detractors felt the weight of an age, as well. Not unlike
Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau, another onetime darling of the
center left, Ardern eventually engendered a hardcore base of critics. “The
same policies that made New Zealand and its prime minister a zero-covid
success also made Ardern a lightning rod for anti-lockdown and anti-
vaccine ardor,” wrote my colleague Michael E. Miller.
“Because she was such a global and public symbol, she did become the
focus of a lot of those attacks,” said Richard Jackson, professor of peace
studies at the University of Otago in Dunedin, New Zealand, to my
colleagues. “Their opinion was that she was destroying New Zealand
society and bringing in ‘communist rule,’ and yet the whole world seemed
to be praising her and lauding her. It irritated the hell out of them.”
To some observers, Ardern became subject to an unjustified, troubling
cycle of rage. “The pressures on prime ministers are always great, but in
this era of social media, clickbait, and 24/7 media cycles, Jacinda has faced
a level of hatred and vitriol which in my experience is unprecedented in our
country,” former New Zealand prime minister Helen Clark wrote in a
statement. “Our society could now usefully reflect on whether it wants to
continue to tolerate the excessive polarization which is making politics an
increasingly unattractive calling.”
Analysts argue that the antics and ire of the anti-Ardern camp have shifted
the moorings of New Zealand’s politics. “The nooses, the misogyny, the
hate, the level of people advocating violence, people threatening to hang
politicians, that’s not part of the New Zealand tradition of politics,”
Alexander Gillespie, professor of law at the University of Waikato, told The
Washington Post.
Ardern aims to return to private life, at least for now. What
happens in subsequent months in Wellington won’t be her responsibility,
though many analysts will undoubtedly search for her mark in events to
come. The manner of her exit may also leave its own defining imprint.
“She worked as hard as she could for as long as she could, and one legacy
she will leave behind is the fact that she showed the work — what it took to
be a leader and a parent, and how eventually it took so much that she could
not in good conscience continue doing it, not in the way she would have
liked,” my colleague Monica Hesse wrote.
“I hope I leave New Zealanders with a belief that you can be kind but
strong, empathetic but decisive, optimistic but focused,” Ardern said while
announcing her resignation. “And that you can be your own kind of leader
— one who knows when it’s time to go.”