New Zealand election date set to avoid school holidays and All Blacks matches

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has announced 19 September as the date her government will go the polls for a general election.

Prime Minister of New Zealand Jacinda Ardern.

Prime Minister of New Zealand Jacinda Ardern. Source: AAP

New Zealanders will have the chance to return or remove Jacinda Ardern's government on 19 September, when Kiwis will go to the polls in a general election.

The prime minister and Labour leader announced the date on Tuesday in Wellington, following the tradition of naming the election date early in the year.

"I will be asking New Zealanders to continue to support my leadership and the current direction of the government which is grounded in stability, a strong economy and progress on the long term challenges facing New Zealand," she said.

Alternate prime minister Simon Bridges, the opposition leader from the Nationals, will be looking to make Ms Ardern's coalition the first one-term New Zealand government in over 40 years.

He faces a tough ask given Ms Ardern's favourability as preferred prime minister, New Zealand's relatively strong economy and the electorate's preference for stability - in stark contrast to the last 15 years in Australian politics.

Still, New Zealand's mixed-member proportional (MMP) system allows for surprising results.

In 2017, the then prime minister Bill English was all smiles on election night, declaring victory after National won over 44 per cent of the vote to be clearly the biggest party in parliament.

Ms Ardern, who became leader just seven weeks earlier in an attempt to resuscitate Labour's failing campaign, became prime minister after winning over minority parties in negotiations to form the government.

Without a landslide result, New Zealand's major parties are likely to rely on minority parties to govern once more.

NZ First, led by Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters, and the Green party both currently back Labour but will run separate campaigns.
NZ Foreign Affairs Minister Winston Peters.
Winston Peters. Source: AAP
Ms Ardern has pledged to run a "positive, factual and robust" campaign, fighting the spread of misinformation or "fake news" online, and submitting their policies for independent costing.

"It's incumbent on us to deliver the campaign New Zealanders expect and deserve," she said.

Ms Ardern dismissed the notion that the 235-day election campaign would fatigue Kiwis, saying it was best practice to have a date set long in advance.

"It's fair and it allows our electoral commission to prepare ... we're all constantly in campaign mode anyway," she said.

The date - 19 September - places the poll in the same month as the last two elections, while avoiding school holidays and All Blacks matches.

New Zealanders will also vote on two hot-button social issues - the legalisation of euthanasia and cannabis - in referendums timed to coincide with the general election.


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3 min read
Published 28 January 2020 2:30pm
Updated 22 February 2022 6:50pm


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