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Jacinda Ardern announced her decision to step down as New Zealand Prime Minister showing her characteristic modesty.
"I have given my absolute all to being prime minister but it has also taken a lot out of me," she said Thursday. "You cannot and should not do the job unless you have a full tank, plus a bit in reserve for those unplanned and unexpected challenges that inevitably come along."
Here was a highly regarded — at home and on the world stage — and astute female politician vacating the top job on her own terms. The move was greeted with universal shock.
She will be missed and her decision should be respected. It underscores the challenges of achieving diversity in politics and business. It's not just about getting women there, but keeping them. We want politicians like Ardern to endure because they are the kind that change the narrative.
Ardern and young female leaders — including Finland's PM Sanna Marin and Denmark's Mette Frederiksen — who have emerged in the past decade stand as a counterpoint to the loud, attention-seeking and narcissistic male leaders riding a wave of populist sentiment. They show us that countries can be run not only with force and bravado, but with compassion as well as a sense of humor. You can be a deft politician and an empathetic one, while having a laugh along the way.
Politics remains a tough arena for women. Australia's first female prime minister, Julia Gillard, endured a barrage of sexist attacks in parliament and in the media that prompted her now famous Misogyny Speech in October 2012 that went viral.