On Her Way To The Top: No one who witnessed Jacinda Ardern’s extraordinarily accomplished performance before the assembled news media on Tuesday morning could reasonably describe her as an “accidental” leader. Hardened journalists – many of them disposed to be cynical about the day’s dramatic turn of events – were astonished at her easy command of the situation. Here was wit, verve and – in her own words – “unrelenting positivity”. Photo by Cameron Burnell.
IT’S ONE OF THOSE PICTURES. The sort that captures not just
a moment, but the essence of a moment. Justin Trudeau had one. It was taken
nearly a year before he became Canada’s prime minister but, looking at it, you
kinda knew that’s where he was headed.
On Tuesday morning, Fairfax photographer, Cameron Burnell,
took “one of those pictures” of Jacinda Ardern. In a brilliant example of
artistic opportunism he spotted Labour’s new leader striding alone through the
corridors of power and pressed the shutter.
The image he selected for the Stuff website tells Tuesday’s
story with minimalist precision.
First and foremost, it is about the stark isolation of
political power. Jacinda strides, unaccompanied, down one of Parliament’s carpeted
corridors, head turned slightly to the right, as if seeking confirmation that
she is not being observed. Whether she should accept, or decline, the Labour
leadership, was not a decision to be shared, or put to a vote, or turned into a
media spectacle: it was hers alone.
The importance of the job she is being asked to do; the
weight of the responsibility her colleagues are asking her to take upon her
shoulders; is etched upon Jacinda’s features. The face in this photograph is
not the happy, smiling countenance so familiar to the readers of women’s
magazines. Unaware that she is being photographed, Jacinda’s expression is one
of quite startling seriousness.
Her mouth is set in a straight line, her nostrils slightly
flared – like a beast of prey testing the flavour of the air. Most striking of
all are her eyes. Shrouded in shadow they absorb the detail of her surroundings
without a trace of furtiveness or fear. This is the face of someone in control
of both herself and her circumstances.
The other quality conveyed in Burnell’s photograph is purposeful
movement. Jacinda strides towards the camera like a person with no time to
lose. The cell-phone gripped tightly in her right hand suggests that the
irksome but necessary back-and-forth of collegial communication has come to an
end. She is moving now, irresistibly, towards her rendezvous with destiny.
Looking at this photograph, it is extremely difficult to
accept the idea that Jacinda Ardern is Labour’s “accidental leader”. The woman
captured by Burnell’s camera does not look like someone overwhelmed by
circumstances beyond their control. Hers is not the face of the agonised
prophet who beseeches God to “take this cup away from me”. Quite the reverse. The
woman in the photo wears a look of “cold command” that Shelley’s Ozymandias
would recognize instantly as the mark of a fellow sovereign.
Which is not to say that each step of Jacinda’s ascension to
the Labour leadership was planned with icy precision. As Oliver Cromwell
observed of the vicissitudes of personal fortune: “no one rises so high as he
who knows not whither he is going.”
What we can say, however, is that ever since her time in
Helen Clark’s office, Jacinda has understood the supreme importance of keeping
oneself in the proximity of power. She has also noted how ready most leaders
are to bestow power upon those who appear to have no serious interest in
wielding it.
Labour is not the sort of party in which naked ambition goes
unnoticed. The moment an MP is suspected of having designs upon the top job,
every other aspirant for the position becomes their enemy. Better by far to
evince a non-threatening naivety; a willingness to smile winningly for women’s
magazines; and, most especially, an oft-expressed reluctance to climb the
greasy pole. That way, one’s inexorable approach towards the throne goes
largely unnoticed, until the day suddenly arrives when one’s astonished rivals
find themselves agreeing that there’s no one else with a better claim to sit on
it.
No one who witnessed Jacinda Ardern’s extraordinarily
accomplished performance before the assembled news media on Tuesday morning
could reasonably describe her as an “accidental” leader. Hardened journalists –
many of them disposed to be cynical about the day’s dramatic turn of events –
were astonished at her easy command of the situation. Here was wit, verve and –
in her own words – “unrelenting positivity”.
Jacinda clearly means to emulate Justin Trudeau’s highly
successful “sunny ways”. New Zealand voters tempted to see Jacinda as some sort
of political Pollyanna, however, should study Cameron Burnell’s photograph.
Tuesday was no accident.
This essay was
originally published in The Waikato Times, The Taranaki Daily News, The
Timaru Herald, The Otago Daily Times and The Greymouth Star of Friday, 4 August 2017.
5 comments:
I've just heard her interviewed on national radio. Didn't catch all of it but of what I did hear, it was pretty much all equivocation. About the only thing she didn't equivocate about was "fiscal responsibility". I guess they've learned their lesson from Cullen's quick back down in the face of commercial rage. She certainly hasn't given me any reason to transfer my vote from the Greens.
You must be living in one of those "posher" electorates then GS.
Hi Chris
I wonder if I will ever be able to see so much in one small photograph. Without your help I don't think I would have noticed more than that she looked a bit worried .
Cheers D J S
This sentence betrays lingering sexism, Chris Trotter (because you are not a mind reader, even of journos you know well) '...Hardened journalists – many of them disposed to be cynical about the day’s dramatic turn of events – were astonished at her easy command of the situation. Here was wit, verve and – in her own words – “unrelenting positivity”.' Why would they/you be astonished at her ease and smarts? Do tell. And no, it's no accident. She's there by unanimous acclaim of her colleagues. Because she's good. [Great photo Cameron Dusty Burnell]
This sentence betrays lingering sexism, Chris Trotter (because you are not a mind reader, even of journos you know well) '...Hardened journalists – many of them disposed to be cynical about the day’s dramatic turn of events – were astonished at her easy command of the situation. Here was wit, verve and – in her own words – “unrelenting positivity”.' Why would they/you be astonished at her ease and smarts? Do tell. And no, it's no accident. She's there by unanimous acclaim of her colleagues. Because she's good. [Great photo Cameron Dusty Burnell]
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