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New Zealand votes for change as center-right National Party takes lead

New Zealand votes for change as center-right National Party takes lead
New Zealand votes for change as center-right National Party takes lead


SYDNEY — New Zealand moved sharply to the right on Saturday with the National Party, led by businessman-turned-politician Christopher Luxon, poised to form a coalition with the libertarian ACT Party and make good on promises to cut government spending and taxes.

The general election result was a sharp rebuke to the center-left Labour Party, which has lost support as the economy has floundered and has suffered a series of political blows since Jacinda Ardern stepped down as prime minister in January.

Her successor, Chris Hipkins, conceded the election as National and ACT were together projected to win at least half of Parliament’s 120 seats. With 85 percent of the vote counted, they appeared able to form a coalition government without the support of the populist New Zealand First Party.

The Labour Party received only 26.5 percent of the total vote with 85 percent of ballots counted, and Foreign Minister Nanaia Mahuta lost her seat.

While a change of government will have little impact on New Zealand’s outward-facing policies — there is broad agreement on the importance of trade and maintaining an independent stance in an increasingly polarized world — it is expected to produce a sharp change in approach domestically.

New Zealand’s likely next prime minister signals openness to China

Elections in the country of 5 million people are always fairly domestic affairs. But shorn of Ardern’s international star power, this year’s campaign at times resembled a county election complete with debates over culling feral cats and cellphone usage in schools.

Luxon, a former Unilever and Air New Zealand executive, ran a campaign centered on the economy, which briefly slipped into recession this year amid soaring inflation and interest rates, making the cost of living a core election issue. National has promised to cut taxes and slash government spending.

He also emphasized law and order, with the 53-year-old traveling the nation to talk with store owners about increases in shoplifting, “ram raids” — burglaries in which a vehicle is used to breach a building — and gangs.

Local media often poked fun at the similarities of the two main party candidates — both White, middle-aged men with the same first name — by describing the contest as a battle between “the Blue Chris” and “the Red Chris.” (Blue is the color of the National Party and red is the color of Labour.)

But the choice of Luxon could have global implications. As Washington and Beijing increasingly vie for influence in the Asia-Pacific, both superpowers have been leaning on New Zealand to take more of a stand.

New Zealand’s bind: Balancing Western security against Chinese trade

The strong conservative showing marked a definitive shift away from six years of Labour rule.

The ACT Party has said it will support National on spending bills but has demurred from committing to forming a full-blown coalition. Luxon will now enter into negotiations with ACT leader David Seymour over what a coalition cabinet could look like.

Ardern’s covid policy was her ‘greatest legacy’ — but also her undoing

Looming over the election was Ardern’s shadow. The former prime minister, who is on a fellowship at Harvard University, led Labour to a historic landslide election in 2020 on the strength of her handling of the Christchurch massacre and the pandemic.

Even as many people around the world hailed her empathetic leadership and efforts to control the spread of the coronavirus, support in New Zealand began to ebb, contributing to her surprise resignation in January.

Hipkins hoped a back-to-basics approach would reverse Labour’s slipping support, but it instead appears to have lost left-wing votes to the Green Party, which had its best showing ever, and Te Pati Maori, which promotes Indigenous rights.

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