Jacinda Ardern

      Jacinda Ardern
      MP
      Jacinda Ardern - cropped.jpg
      Official New Zealand Labour Party portrait of Jacinda Ardern
      Member of the New Zealand Parliament
      for Labour Party List
      Incumbent
      Assumed office
      8 November 2008
      Personal details
      Born (1980-07-26) 26 July 1980 (age 32)
      Hamilton, New Zealand[1]
      Nationality  New Zealand
      Political party Labour Party

      Jacinda Kate Laurell Ardern[2] (b. 26 July 1980) is a New Zealand politician. A member of the Labour Party, she was elected as a list MP at the 2008 general election.[3]

      Personal life

      Ardern grew up in Morrinsville and Murupara, where her father was a policeman.[4] She attended Waikato University, where she earned a Bachelor of Arts degree in Communications. She joined the Labour Party at a young age, and became a senior figure in the Young Labour Party. After graduating from Waikato University, she spent time working in the office of Phil Goff, and of Helen Clark as a researcher. She later spent time in London, working as a senior policy advisor.[5] In early 2008 she was elected as the President of the International Union of Socialist Youth.[6]

      In 2013, during a speech on the Marriage Amendment Bill, Ardern confirmed that she had been raised as a Mormon but left the Mormon Church in 2005 because it conflicted with her political views.[7]

      ↑Jump back a section

      Member of Parliament

      Parliament of New Zealand
      Years Term Electorate List Party
      2008–2011 49th List 20 Labour
      2011 – present 50th List 13 Labour
      Ardern, with Phil Goff and Carol Beaumont, at an anti-mining march on 1 May 2010.

      After being placed high on Labour's party list for the 2008 election (at number 20 she was virtually guaranteed a seat in Parliament) she returned from London to campaign full time. She was selected as the Party's candidate for the Waikato electorate. Ardern was unsuccessful in the electorate vote, but was elected a List MP. Upon election, she was the youngest sitting MP in Parliament, succeeding fellow Labour MP Darren Hughes, and remained the youngest MP until the election of Gareth Hughes on 11 February 2010.

      Ardern was appointed Labour's spokesperson for Youth Affairs, and associate spokesperson for Justice (Youth Affairs) by Labour leader Phil Goff.[8]

      Jacinda Ardern has featured as a panel guest on the TVNZ show Back Benches. The episode's panel was all young members of the political parties. On 19 November 2008, shortly after the 2008 general election, Ardern featured for her first time on this show. She featured again on Wednesday 23 June 2010,shortly after the shadow cabinet reshuffle, in which Ardern had no portfolio change.

      She has also made regular appearances on TVNZ's Breakfast programme as part of the 'Young Guns' feature in which she appeared alongside National MP Simon Bridges.

      Ardern contested the high-profile Auckland Central seat for Labour at the 2011 general election, against incumbent National MP Nikki Kaye for National and Greens candidate Denise Roche. Despite targeting Green voters to vote strategically for her, she was unsuccessful in her bid to unseat Kaye, losing by 717 votes. However, she was returned to Parliament via the party list.[9]

      After Goff resigned from the leadership following his defeat at the 2011 election, Ardern supported David Shearer over David Cunliffe. She was elevated to the fourth-ranking position in the Shadow Cabinet on 19 December 2011, becoming Spokesperson for Social Development under new leader David Shearer. In 2012 the Trans Tasman Roll Call rated her performance for the year at five out of ten, summarising that Ardern "thinks she knows her stuff but there is little sign she does her homework or has come up with new ideas in her policy area."[10]

      ↑Jump back a section

      External links

      ↑Jump back a section

      Read in another language

      This page is available in 2 languages

      Last modified on 14 June 2013, at 10:44