Here’s a prediction for you, for what it’s worth.
Jacinda Ardern will be a one-term Prime Minister. Not because she’s no good, quite the opposite...because she’s a rockstar who is ready to move on.
Even if Labour win another term in 2020, my bet is she won’t be at the helm. She’ll be off to greener pastures. Like the UN.
Why?
Because when you are this young and make this big of an impact internationally, when you are lauded on the international stage to the degree she’s been this year, you strike while the iron is hot.
The spotlight is on her and it’s a good time to be a woman – and a competent one at that.
What is the world desperate for right now? Capable compassionate women. Box ticked.
If the UN isn't sniffing around her yet, I’d be surprised. And if they are, my pick is she’ll go.
She’s had a taste of the international scene, she handled it with aplomb.
Everything the UN stands for aligns with her own beliefs. She’s big on ideology, a fan of discussion and consultation, she’s empathetic. Perfect UN material.
Who needs the stress and day to day tumult of being Prime Minister if you don’t have to?
Here, she is trapped in a finite political cycle. Her time will come and go. And she’s at the top of the tree already.
At her age, if you want longevity and you’ve got political aspirations and a ‘change the world’ mindset, you need to go further afield. Think about it, she didn’t expect to be Prime Minister so soon, let alone even leader of her party.
It all happened fast, and she’s already halfway through her term.
She’s managed to navigate in that time, a new coalition government, a baby, a national crisis, and working the international stage.
And as far as the international press is concerned, she hasn’t put a foot wrong.
If you’re an ambitious person, you’re already thinking of the next step.
Why would you hang around if you’re already able to tick the Prime Minister box?
When Ardern famously appeared at the UN with baby Neve watching on, it made worldwide headlines.
Not because of the impact of her speech, which was largely to an empty chamber, but because of what she represented.
At the time, political editors were hailing her as “the torch carrier for progressive politics".
The BBC’s Nick Bryant called her UN performance, “the most interesting debutante of the year".
So how do you capitalize on all that exposure and all that international goodwill?
You strike while the iron’s hot.
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