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Stephanie Cullen's avatar

Welcome home!

I think it’s impossible to say Ardern didn’t change the country, as she shaped it *while* it was changing. It’s just that she perhaps didn’t change it through her legislative agenda as Richardson did. But I don’t think it’s a bad thing that it’s hard to summarise ‘ardernism’, or to label it. It shares its uncertainty with the entire leftist movement — and like leftism, it’ll get there. Give it time.

Better people question Ardern’s legacy than immediately settle on something like “Ruthenasia”. I was surprised to learn Richardson was proud of that. I imagine Ardern would be horrified if her legacy was such — ironic, as Ardern actually legalised euthanasia.

I think what Ardern did was not legislative but bureaucratic and executive-lead. And it was demonstrative. Not to be too personal but I’m at the mercy of the system currently and something notable I experienced was that WINZ became

so friendly, some people forgot that they ever could be awful. Not me. But Ardern made the country hopeful and pushed us towards a better tomorrow, made us think that tomorrow was today, and her takeover from National made it seem smooth enough that people forgot what NACT are like.

It felt like the changes she had made at the time were irreversible because what she changed was the culture, the focus, the *how* — the social safety net was made safe. No more holes. Make it out of soft, not razor thin wire that cuts you when you ask for help. Ministries like Whaikaha tested and expanded Enabling Good Lives-like support across the entire country. Maori were being acknowledged as partners, if perhaps not entirely treated as one. But she unified and typified the sort of progressiveness that New Zealand prides itself on.

Some of it even NACT can’t go back on openly, like EGL philosophy under Ministry for Disabilities, though they’ll certainly cut it to shreds in their attempts through bad budgeting and by removing its main financial function and giving it back to the only government department to ever inspire a mass shooting.

I cannot emphasise enough the incredible turnaround that happened there — someone shot up a WINZ office because WINZ was so awful, and then a short time later, support organisations had forgotten that WINZ could be terrible and turned hostile.

But it at least pushes the right’s ideology more firmly into a space where it must operate more openly, and its hypocrisy and repetitiveness becomes more visible. They are anti-kindness, anti-support, anti-progress. They are the third right-wing austerity government of three — and like the Tories eventually did in the UK, they’ve run out of believable excuses. It’s apparent that it’s austerity for the sake of austerity. It’s self-made austerity too, pure ideology pushing for privatisation and taking money out of the economy, causing all manner of catastrophes NACT now have to pretend to fix, in which their economic management merges with social stances to reveal the deep classist and corrupt roots that permeate the “center” party and its pet attack dog.

I think Ardern’s legacy has to be the response to *her*, and what she showed us our responses can be. She said the word out loud — empathy. Kindness. Openness. She showed us radicalism was wanted and needed, that the country was ready for change: that we thought we were changing, even, transforming into a more unified and stronger nation through our crises. We were setting examples internationally. When really, we weren’t.

But the reactionary response has exposed the deep divisions that pervade politics and prevent us from moving forwards. We are in a six-to-nine year cycle of funding and defunding in an exhausting endurance test where the right are still pushing their extreme unwanted legislative agenda from the 2000s and the 90s on to an unwilling, barely-noticing nation, and the lack of responsible management and the consequences of chopping and changing and underfunding things that are politically unpopular to pay for in a post-neoliberal society are very apparent.

Ardernism and its legacy is, I think, whatever we do next.

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Louisa McKnight's avatar

I often wonder why no-one holds Ms. Ardern to account for the destruction she wrought on Kiwi women and our rights by supporting passage of the Self-Id provisions of the BDMRR Act (2021) and the act prohibiting counselling for gender-confused children (the conversion practices ban - an exercise in Orwellian double-speak). Those of us who begged her not to legitimise medicalising children who don't fit sex role stereotypes lost. But women and men in NZ lost big time when biologically-based legal categories for "woman" and "man" were scrapped by her. And because biology does matter, women are - as usual - the bigger losers. It is poor consolation that those opposing these measures have been more than fully vindicated by reviews of paediatric medicine for such children in Finland, Sweden, the UK and the US, to name a few. If you, Henry, were previously on the staff of Stuff, there is presumably little chance that you would wish to examine these issues for yourself. For Kiwis who are interested in what this all means, Broadsheet, New Zealand's Feminist Magazine continues to promote an understanding of these issues on its Facebook page.

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