In direct contrast to the Arsehat category — which gave us the clearest winner in the award’s history — the voting for 2019 Person of the Year has been the tightest on record. A mere 37 votes separate first and second place.
So first, an honourable mention to Greta Thunberg, who spent the year giving world leaders a well deserved shellacking for their inaction on climate change. The predictable barrage of hostility and petty insults from conservative politicians and media has left her unbowed.
Perhaps she takes it — as we in the Crikey bunker do — as a sign that she’s having an impact.
But, ultimately, our readers — perhaps with a sigh of jealousy — opted for a leader across the Tasman.
“They are us”. Three words from a leader dealing with the immediate aftermath of a disaster, the likes of which her country had never seen. That first speech, before the full extent of the horror was known, summed up why New Zealand PM Jacinda Ardern topped this list:
Many of those who will have been directly affected by this shooting may be migrants to New Zealand, they may even be refugees here. They have chosen to make New Zealand their home, and it is their home.
They are us.
Ardern’s response to the unimaginable horror of the Christchurch massacre was more or less flawless in both tone and content. The dignity and solidarity she showed with victims was matched with the courage to act decisively on reforming New Zealand’s gun laws.
In a year where many leaders fled from scrutiny or cashed in on the kind of sentiments that lead to incidents like Christchurch, Ardern showed what leadership that pushes back against the worst parts of society really looks like.
The Whakaari/White Island disaster acted as a grotesque bookend on New Zealand’s year. The full extent of the response is still developing, but if the aftermath of March 2019 is anything to go by, those impacted would be justified in a quiet confidence they’re in good hands.
Well deserved winner…it would be wonderful if our Scumbag leader took some pointers from her, but fat chance of that.
So this is how an agnostic leader operates: humanely, civilly, intelligently.
Plenty lessons there for alleged Christian politicians.
Yes, we all love Jacinda and NZ, but a question: why do they still have bloody knighthoods?
Not worth getting into a twist about this. She inherited them, New Zealanders like them. Just let it go!
What an argument. Whitlam inherited them too.
Our previous Labour Prime Minister, Helen Clark, got rid of them in the early 2000’s and replaced with NZ orders of merit. The following National (conservative/liberal) PM, John Key, brought them back for himself and his mates. Jacinda Ardern’s Labour-led government is busy dealing with the legacy of child poverty, climate change, justice reform, infrastructure backlog issues, mental health support, ending issues resulting from colonialism/racism etc. to prioritise getting rid of them again. Her views are similar to Helen Clark’s on the issue though, maybe in her next term she might sort them out?
I both like and respect Jacinda…but Greta is something else! A young 16 (then) year old, autistic schoolgirl, who has changed the world, and she will just keep on, keeping on. Attacking these middle-aged white males, who think they run the planet…climate deniers with criminal intent.
Of course Greta is correct, and deserves our complete support!!
A good choice from an envious West Island. Greta may be next year’s choice.