NZ Prime Minister-elect Ardern focuses on final touches in coalition deal

FAN Editor
New Zealand Labour leader Jacinda Ardern speaks to the press after leader of New Zealand First party Winston Peters announced his support for her party in Wellington, New Zealand
New Zealand Labour leader Jacinda Ardern speaks to the press after leader of New Zealand First party Winston Peters announced his support for her party in Wellington, New Zealand, October 19, 2017. REUTERS/Charlotte Greenfield

October 19, 2017

By Charlotte Greenfield

WELLINGTON (Reuters) – New Zealand Prime Minister-elect Jacinda Ardern said she would spend Friday ironing out issues and ministerial posts with coalition partner New Zealand First, one day after becoming the Pacific nation’s youngest leader in more than 150 years.

The previous night’s highly anticipated announcement by New Zealand First leader Winston Peters that he would support 37-year-old Ardern’s Labour Party had ended a decade of center-right National rule and spelt big changes for the country’s economy.

The New Zealand dollar – the world’s 11th-most traded currency – was down 1.7 percent, after its largest one-day fall in more than a year amid jitters around the new government’s protectionist agenda.

The country’s stock market fell 1.1 percent when it opened on Friday morning.

Ardern told Radio New Zealand on Friday that her party would meet to decide ministerial posts in the afternoon, though it had already offered the deputy prime minister role to Peters and was waiting for his decision.

She confirmed that most of the party’s flagship policies, including a ban on some foreign ownership of housing, had survived the negotiations with Peters in recent weeks.

“With New Zealand First we’ve got a few more details to iron out,” Ardern said. “Our plan remains, with a few minor changes … we’re finalising in the next 24 hours the detail of both agreements.”

The inconclusive election on Sept. 23 had thrust the country into political limbo for almost a month with neither major party winning enough seats to form a majority and giving New Zealand First the balance of power.

New Zealand First and Labour also needed support from the progressive Green Party, which said it would strike a “confidence and supply” agreement, meaning it was officially outside government but would hold ministerial posts and vote on key pieces of legislation like the budget.

On Thursday evening, Labour said it would also stick to its promises to change the central bank’s mandate and seek to renegotiate the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal.

Ardern said the parties would release their agreements early next week and an announcement on ministerial posts would come later in the week.

(Reporting by Charlotte Greenfield; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

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