ZB ZB
Live now
Start time
Playing for
End time
Listen live
Listen to NAME OF STATION
Up next
Listen live on
ZB

Claire Trevett: PM Jacinda Ardern's Trump tactics

Author
Claire Trevett, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Sun, 23 Sep 2018, 5:51PM
When PM Jacinda Ardern turns up to the formal dinner Donald Trump is hosting for all the leaders Tuesday, she will not try to avoid the US President, nor will she try to engineer a fulsome chat. Photos / AP, NZME
When PM Jacinda Ardern turns up to the formal dinner Donald Trump is hosting for all the leaders Tuesday, she will not try to avoid the US President, nor will she try to engineer a fulsome chat. Photos / AP, NZME

Claire Trevett: PM Jacinda Ardern's Trump tactics

Author
Claire Trevett, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Sun, 23 Sep 2018, 5:51PM

When Prime Minister John Key went to international summits he adopted sharp elbows and shamelessness to cut through the throng of world leaders and get precious face time with then US President Barack Obama.

If his officials could not negotiate a precious pull-aside on the sidelines, Key would wrangle his own by making sure he just happened to be next to Obama when the leaders were on a break or even walking to a dinner. The king hit was the invite to play golf in Hawaii.

His approach was to build a personal relationship by finding common ground.

But Key didn't have to contend with US President Donald Trump - and for Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern the common ground is a lot harder to find.

In fact, Ardern's approach at the UN in New York is to instead club up with other like-minded leaders hoping to send a joint message on the issues where they stand apart from Trump - most notably trade, immigration and climate change.

Those leaders include European leaders such as Germany's Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron, as well as Canada's Justin Trudeau.

About 140 leaders are in New York for the annual leaders' week, and the New Zealand PM usually tries to catch up with those who will not be at other summits. This year Trump is one of those - he will not attend Apec or the East Asia Summit later in the year.

But when Ardern turns up to the formal dinner Trump is hosting for all the leaders Tuesday morning (NZ time), while she will not try to avoid Trump nor will she try to engineer a fulsome chat.

A photo of Key and Obama arm in arm was political gold back home, the more matey the better.

A photo of Ardern and Trump would be the opposite, especially among Ardern's base.

The next day Ardern will also listen to Trump speak at the UN General Assembly.

One of the focuses is expected to be Iran after Trump declared Iran had broken the anti-nuclear deal brokered by his predecessor and imposed sanctions again, issuing a plea for other countries to follow suit.

It is yet another area of difference with other leaders. Ardern said she will continue to support the agreement. "Of course we were disappointed at the US withdrawal. Our view was that it had achieved what it set out to achieve."

Life was easier for Key. Obama was in favour of the Trans-Pacific Partnership, the Paris Agreement on climate change, and had a "Pacific" tilt to his foreign policy to ensure US influence was not ceded to China. Trump has none of that.

Ardern has not bothered to hide her less than sympathetic view of Trump, even when speaking on his home soil.

In an interview on The Today Show in April, Ardern said she was "furious" to have been likened to Trump when it came to immigration - a comparison based on Labour's pledge to ban foreign house buyers and restrict foreign investment.

"The suggestion in any way that New Zealand was not an open, outward-facing country, the suggestion I was leading something that was counter to that value made me extremely angry."

The obvious implication is that Trump's USA was not open or outward looking.
But theirs was not a promising start. Prior to becoming Labour leader, Ardern had marched in the Women's March which doubled as an anti-Trump march after his election.

It was perhaps in retaliation that at their first meeting face to face at Trump reportedly mistook her for Trudeau's wife.

All might not be lost, however. Ardern's partner, Clarke Gayford, has been invited to a reception hosted by Melania Trump which might prove more productive in finding that common ground.

Take your Radio, Podcasts and Music with you