WELLINGTON, New Zealand — New Zealand will hold a national election on Nov. 7, Prime Minister Christopher Luxon announced Wednesday.
Luxon, the leader of a center-right government, will seek a second term in office, with the election likely to be a ballot on whether his pledges to improve the economy after the COVID-19 pandemic have gained enough traction to convince voters still struggling with living and housing costs. The main center-left opposition Labour Party, lead by Chris Hipkins, has regained support since its poor showing in the previous 2023 election and analysts forecast a tight race.
New Zealand elections are held every three years with the government selecting the exact date. Voters choose which party they prefer to see in government and also select a local candidate to represent their constituency in Parliament.
The country of 5 million people has a unicameral parliament, which means governments are powerful deciders of how the country operates. The National Party and Labour usually must form coalitions with smaller parties to hold a majority in parliament, giving the minor parties unusual sway in which major party leads.
The economy and living costs are central
Announcing the election date at a retreat for his party's lawmakers in the city of Christchurch on Wednesday, Luxon underlined what he said was his party's track record on working to rebuild a post-pandemic economy. Days earlier in a speech to a business audience in Auckland on Monday, he acknowledged that reversing the country's fortunes had not been simple and that many New Zealanders have endured ''two years of hard grind.''
The economy has contracted a further 0.5 percentage point in the most recently measured 12 months, and migration to neighboring, wealthier Australia has at times hit record highs during Luxon's tenure. Luxon on Monday blamed the former Labour-led government for the country's woes, saying he had ''inherited a mess.''
Analysts said that with inflation trending down and business confidence beginning to grow, Luxon will hope the months until this year's election will be long enough to convince New Zealanders that the economic reversal he pledged in 2023 is taking root.