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There used to be a website devoted to pointing out examples of world maps that didn't bother to include New Zealand. If we did make it, we were tucked into the lower right corner, just past Australia. We're used to being far away and forgotten.
For a brief time, Jacinda Ardern put us on the map.
Here was a young prime minister, elected in 2017 at just 37, with an Obama-grade 1,000-watt smile, who symbolized optimism and Kiwi values of fairness and hope. To progressive admirers around the world, she became a symbolic alternative to Donald Trump, proving that progressives could win elections and even have a baby in office.
Ardern, who announced last week that she would resign, citing burnout, had promised New Zealanders a "transformational" government that would build homes to address a housing crisis and reduce child poverty. After the murder of 51 people at two mosques in the quiet and lovely city of Christchurch by a white supremacist, she rose to the moment with her empathetic response and quick action to ban most semiautomatic weapons.
To us she was just "Jacinda."
But over time, many Kiwis came to feel that, despite her international image, Jacinda's rhetoric was never quite matched by substance.