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New Zealand opposition leader Jacinda Ardern forced into tax policy U-turn as support dips

The survey of 1,000 voters also showed Ardern’s rating as preferred prime minister slipped one point to 34 per cent

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New Zealand Labour Party leader Jacinda Ardern. Photo: AFP
Agence France-Presse

New Zealand opposition leader Jacinda Ardern made a U-turn on tax policy on Thursday in a bid to shore up support amid fears her charmed election campaign run is over.

Ardern had previously refused to release a tax plan ahead of the September 23 election, saying she would consult a committee of experts after the poll.

But the policy vacuum allowed Prime Minister Bill English to attack Ardern’s financial credibility, halting the momentum she developed after taking over the centre-left Labour Party last month.

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English’s conservative National Party ran an effective scare campaign warning voters Labour could introduce taxes on assets like the family home and inheritances, despite denials from Ardern.

In an effort to reignite the “Jacinda-mania” of recent weeks, Ardern said on Thursday there would be no changes to the tax system until 2021, taking the issue off the agenda for the current campaign.

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“I heard from voters that they wanted that certainty,” Ardern told reporters.

The move came as opinion polls provided mixed messages for the charismatic 37-year-old, who took over the Labour leadership with the party’s support at 20-year lows of 23 per cent.

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