The 2020 New Zealand general election will be held on 19th September
The 2020 New Zealand general election will be held after the currently elected 52nd New Zealand Parliament is dissolved or expires. Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has announced the election date as Saturday 19 September 2020. The question on many people’s minds is, will Jacinda Ardern win the 2020 General Election? As the four opinions below attest, her winning a second successive term hangs precariously in the balance. Thanks to Covid-19 and the quantum economic shift it has created, New Zealand is rapidly sliding into a deepening economic crisis / recession, with leading economists saying that the government now has a massive fiscal repair job on its hands, possibly the biggest ever. Voter sentiment generally, is that when poor economic results like these present themselves around election time, there is no other option than to punish the ruling party of the day and hope that the opposition party will do a better job and turn the tide. In an effort, to provide a different, numbers only perspective on this burning question, we’ve applied 365 Pin Code Analytics to Jacinda Ardern’s core numbers and what we’ve found, especially with regards to her 2021, is quite astonishing! No doubt 2020, 2021 (especially!) and 2022 are going to be extreme years, both for her and for the people of New Zealand, however, come 2023, things will turn, for the better. This piece of research helps to expand the intense R&D work we’re doing this year, especially with regards to better understanding Numerology For Women.
“One of the criticisms I’ve faced over the years is that I am not aggressive enough or assertive enough, or maybe somehow, because I’m empathetic, I’m weak. I totally rebel against that. I refuse to believe that you cannot be both compassionate and strong.” Jacinda Ardern, New Zealand Prime Minister
Will Jacinda Ardern win the 2020 General Election?
Opinion 1: By Suze Wilson for The Conversation
Your decisions affect the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of people, resulting in huge economic disruption, mass layoffs and business closures. Imagine you must act quickly, without having complete certainty your decisions will achieve what you hope. Now imagine that turning your decisions into effective action depends on winning the support of millions of people. Yes, you do have enforcement capacity at your disposal. But success or failure hinges on getting most people to choose to follow your leadership – even though it demands sudden, unsettling, unprecedented changes to their daily lives.
Jacinda Ardern is giving most Western politicians a masterclass in crisis leadership
This is the harsh reality political leaders around the world have faced in responding to COVID-19. As someone who researches and teaches leadership – and has also worked in senior public sector roles under both National and Labour-led governments – I’d argue New Zealand’s Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern is giving most Western politicians a masterclass in crisis leadership. Of course, not everything has been perfect in New Zealand’s or Ardern’s COVID-19 response. Ongoing, independent scrutiny of the government’s response is essential. But as my own research has argued, expecting perfection of leaders, especially in such difficult circumstances, is a fool’s errand. It’s never possible. Nor should we allow the “perfect” to become the enemy of the “good” when speed and enormous complexity are such significant features of the decision-making context. Whether you’re comparing Ardern’s performance against other Western leaders, or assessing her efforts using researchers’ measures of leadership excellence, as a New Zealander I think there is much to be grateful for in how she is leading us through this crisis.
Opinion 2: By Joshua McDonald for The Diplomat
In late 2016, few people outside of New Zealand knew who Jacinda Ardern was and she seemed to want to keep it that way. Poll after poll showed a major loss in confidence among voters and so the party’s leader, Andrew Little, resigned – just seven weeks out from an election. Ardern, who said she only heard of Little’s decision to step down on her way into parliament that day, was unanimously elected in his stead. “Everyone knows that I have just accepted – with short notice – the worst job in politics,” she told reporters. “The circumstances may not be what Labour had planned for this campaign, but that has not weakened my resolve, or my focus.” Despite having previously wanted to avoid the spotlight, Ardern used her time in it wisely. She brought the issues she had always championed, such as child poverty, the housing crisis, social inequality, and climate change, to the forefront of her campaign.
Ardern became the country’s third female prime minister
Within weeks, Labour rose in the polls from a historical low of 24 percent under Little to 43 percent under Ardern – the first time the party had a lead on the then-ruling National Party in over a decade. While it was an incredible turn around, it wasn’t enough to secure an outright win. Labour, along with the Greens, won 54 seats, while the National party came out with 57. The close result left New Zealand First, a minor right-wing party that had won nine seats, in a kingmaker position. New Zealand First leader Winston Peters took advantage of the situation to form a government with Labour and the Greens, with himself as deputy prime minister and Ardern as prime minister. In throwing his support behind Ardern, Peters said, “It’s time for capitalism to regain its human face.” That made Ardern the country’s third female prime minister, the youngest prime minister in more than 150 years – and, as of June 2018, the second elected leader in modern history to give birth while in office. Unemployment has dropped to its lowest rate in 12 years. Paid parental leave has been extended from 18 to 22 weeks. New Zealand became the first country in the world to enshrine its commitment to the Paris agreement into law. Under the Child Poverty Reduction Act her government claims to have lifted between 50,000 and 70,000 children out of poverty and in May 2019 Ardern, to much acclaim, unveiled the “world first” wellbeing budget, in a bid to tackle mental illness, family violence, and child poverty.
It hasn’t all been smooth sailing though.
Support for Ardern at home has waned, in part, due to her government’s failure to address New Zealand’s housing crisis. Under Ardern’s leadership, the Labour coalition showed that parties with varying views can effectively govern together, which could perhaps even serve as an antidote to the division that has taken hold in politics in democracies around the world. Heading into this next election, New Zealanders will decide whether it has been enough to fend off the rise of populism and nationalism around the world and whether Ardern’s values of compassion, kindness and inclusion will win her a second term.
Opinion 3: for the Japan Times
New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern won global acclaim for her response to the Christchurch mosque shootings — but 12 months on, her political future hangs in the balance and there are signs “Jacinda-mania” has peaked. The center-left leader had been in office barely 18 months on March 15 last year when a self-avowed white supremacist opened fire at two mosques during Friday prayers, killing 51 and injuring another 40. Faced with a crisis unprecedented in New Zealand’s modern history, Ardern rose to the challenge with a mixture of compassion and decisive action. She offered support for New Zealand’s Muslims, rejected the shooter’s ideology, immediately moved to tighten gun laws and launched a global initiative to curb online extremism. Ardern’s personal popularity rating peaked at 51 percent shortly after the shootings and her Labour Party briefly reached similar levels, setting her on a path to re-election in polls set for later this year.
NZ’s Sept. 19 vote is now looking uncomfortably tight
But the Sept. 19 vote is now looking uncomfortably tight for the 39-year-old, with the center-right National Party edging ahead five points in opinion polls to 46 percent. Labour’s support has not fallen off a cliff but appears to have plateaued amid perceptions it has failed to deliver on issues such as affordable housing and reducing child poverty. It joined forces with two minor parties to form a government after the 2017 election, but one of its coalition partners, New Zealand First, is currently flatlining in the polls. Professor Stephen Levine, a political scientist at Wellington’s Victoria University, said Ardern — like U.S. leaders John F. Kennedy and Barack Obama before her — was more popular overseas than with domestic audiences. “Internationally, people are looking at the big picture, not the day-to-day details,” he said. “It is by no means inconceivable that Jacinda will be a one-term prime minister.” Massey University politics specialist and associate professor Grant Duncan said many international observers would be baffled that a charismatic, widely praised leader was facing such an uncertain future. “For an outsider looking at New Zealand, we have this amazing prime minister, she’s ticking so many boxes but guess what, she might not be prime minister after the next election,” he said. Ardern won office on a wave of “Jacinda-mania” after being thrust into the Labour leadership just seven weeks before the 2017 election.
Ardern became only the second prime minister in the world to give birth while in office
She made headlines again a year later when she became only the second prime minister in the world to give birth while in office — after Pakistan’s Benazir Bhutto in 1990. But it was the way she handled the horrors of Christchurch that defined Ardern’s image. “This is one of those crucial moments when a leader has to rise above politics to really represent the country symbolically — and she nailed it,” Duncan said. “She focused on the victims, not the perpetrator. What she said was healing and the nation needed healing at that time.” The moment that most resonated globally was when Ardern donned a headscarf while comforting victims’ families after the shooting, later saying it was a spontaneous gesture of respect to the Muslim community. But Levine said Ardern remained a center-left leader in a country which, despite its progressive reputation, has a large conservative base. He said this meant Ardern’s appeal — which lifted Labour’s polling by almost 15 points after she became leader — came with in-built limitations. “For a lot of people in this country, it’s part of their identity to be National or Labour — these are tribes really and that’s just the way it is,” he said. Duncan said many National supporters admired Ardern’s handling of the Christchurch shootings but it would not sway them at the ballot box. “They’re not being budged because we have this celebrity prime minister, even if they appreciate what she did with the mosque shootings,” he said. “That doesn’t cut it for them.”
Opinion 4: By foreign affairs reporter Melissa Clarke for ABC Australia
Around the world, Jacinda Ardern has received acclaim from those who see the charismatic New Zealand Prime Minister as a leader for the modern age. The progressive young mother, who is due to make a short visit to Australia on Friday, has been lauded for steering her nation compassionately through terrorism attacks and natural disasters. But at home, Ardern’s leadership and judgement are under question. New Zealand’s political scene is currently beset by donations scandals, with the most dubious elements embroiling her Deputy Prime Minister and her Government’s junior coalition partner. Ardern has refused to reprimand, criticise or even question her Deputy Prime Minister, Winston Peters, and his party, despite — or perhaps because of — her prime ministership depending on his support. With a general election due in September, will Kiwis see Ardern as flying above the political fray? Or will her hands-off attitude taint her as just another politician trying to dodge difficult questions about murky fundraising? At the centre of this saga is Peters: long-time political provocateur, leader of the nationalist minor party New Zealand First and, crucially, holder of the balance of power in NZ’s Parliament. Back in 2017, Peters kept everyone in New Zealand on tenterhooks for a month after the national election, before declaring he would back the Labour Party to govern.
Peters’ decision catapulted Ardern unexpectedly into power
His decision catapulted a new, inexperienced leader — Ardern — unexpectedly into power, and in the process snagged himself the deputy prime minister and foreign minister titles. Fast forward to 2020 and NZ First has been exposed as dealing with opaque loans and donations. It turns out that some of NZ’s wealthiest business owners were making large donations to the NZ First Foundation, but splitting them up into multiple, smaller donations to avoid having to reveal them. Two businesses owned by Graeme Hart — NZ’s richest man — made donations on the same day to NZ First Foundation, both worth $NZ14,995. The amount is significant — it just happens to be $NZ5.01 short of the disclosure threshold under New Zealand law. In another case, three separate entities linked to the wealthy Van Den Brink family made donations on the same day, totalling $NZ36,000 but each falling under the $NZ15,000.01 disclosure limit. In fact, every donation to the NZ First Foundation since the 2017 election has fallen under the disclosure limit. Ardern has been under pressure from opposition parties to stand Peters down while the Serious Fraud Office investigation takes place.
Ardern has declared the scandal has nothing to do with her
Ardern told Radio New Zealand that while she was in charge of the Government, she was not in charge of the two other parties that form part of her Government’s ruling coalition — NZ First and the Greens. The election date has been set for September 19, but recent polling gives a good hint as to why Ardern and Labour aren’t keen to risk that being brought forward. Despite her strong lead as preferred prime minister, voting intentions suggest the election outcome would be on a knife edge. Some of the most reputable polling shows a National-led coalition garnering more support than a second term for the Labour Government.
What do Jacinda Ardern’s numbers say?
Opinions 1 to 4 reveal that the upcoming New Zealand election is fraught with conflicting opinions and no doubt it will be very hotly contested. As such, right now, the question, will Jacinda Ardern win the 2020 General Election, is anyone’s guess! However, as you will learn from our applying 365 Pin Code intelligence to Ms Ardern’s numbers, things do not look in the least bit rosy for her. First, we analyse her Full Birth Name [FBN] and then her Date of Birth [DOB]. Then we feed these, and other significant datapoints, in to our 365 Pin Code Predictive Model which gives us lines of code defining the dominant theme(s) of any given year for her in 4D (Personal Physical, Personal Emotional, Professional Physical, Professional Emotional). It is this model, and how we strategically unpack (i.e. provide context around the content) its numerical intelligence, which sets 365 Pin Code Numerology apart, as does how we report on your most core numbers. This numerically informed grid or matrix allows us to leverage real strategic thinking which in turn flows into next level strategic planning, and all this gives you the opportunity to connect with what we call, Futurist Numerology…
365 Pin Code Full Birth Name Analysis: Jacinda Kate Laurell Ardern
With regards to the above chart, what makes Jacinda Ardern such an amazing, emotionally connected, empathetic leader, is that the Numbers 1 [me] and 9 [we] in her full birth name (both score over target, at 150% of target) are perfectly balanced. A perfect balance between a person’s “ME” and “WE” is extremely rare. To have both scored over target implies a consciously aware leader [1], who is spiritually connected with and to higher causes [9] and who also has a well-developed ego/sense of self [1]. It also reveals a well-balanced individual who is well connected with the natural balance required between serving self [1] and serving others [9].
Her THREE [3] Karmic Lessons [pertaining to the number 6, number 7 and number 8] reveal that she has a Number 6 Subconscious Self [SCS = 9-3 = 6]. The Subconscious Self is “that significant part of us which lies beneath”, it is emotional, and it is and always will be, a primary driver and influencer in the person’s life choices and decision-making process. The number 6 energy or vibration is linked with relationships, responsibility, matters of the heart, family, sense of community, grace and gratitude, helping and serving others etc. Again, this explains why during times of crisis, she is so superbly connected with the people of New Zealand and this is the reason why she has the innate gift to easily and effortlessly create “Jacinda-mania” if you will.
365 Pin Code Table explaining Numerology number 1 to 9 and Master Number 11 and 22
Her Number 3 Hidden Passion (scores 188% of target, the highest score in the above table) speaks to her having a natural talent when it comes to communication, creativity, happiness, joy, self-expression, optimism, inspiration and of course the imagination. This, coupled with number 6 subconscious self, makes her a brilliant leader during difficult and turbulent times. Yes, she will feel (intensely so!) the tremendous pressure which goes with carrying a nation and their collective anxieties and burdens through trauma and tragedy (economic, socio-political etc.), however, her gracious ability to clearly articulate what has to be done and to inspire others to do exactly this, is what sets her apart from others.
Her Number 4 Primary Expression Number [Jacinda Kate Laurell Ardern = 94//13//4] links with her with a no-nonsense, let’s get things done in an orderly, proper, organised, systemic and disciplined way, approach to everyday life. She is not impressed with “short-cuts or chancy approaches” and always wants to see the plan, know that’s its practically implementable and once she’s satisfied with this, get on with it, in a manner which aligns with law and order. Does this not make her even more attractive as a leader during deeply economically troubled and emotionally turbulent times? Surely these times are coming! Much has been written about New Zealand hurtling right now into dark economic times. Face it, the entire world is hurtling into the worst of economic times and it is during these darkest of hours that the world and its people need emotionally connected, empathetic leaders. Leader, who will do whatever it takes to look after their people and their needs. What the world does not need right now is a bunch of lying, deceiving leaders who cynically put the state of the economy, monetary gains and profiteering at all costs, ahead of the basic daily needs of people. Put simplistically, what the world needs is more female leaders like Jacinda Ardern, Sanna Marin etc. not ego-driven maniacs whose separatist actions destabilise the world to such an extent that the long-term repercussions, possibly even right down to the United Nations, are quite unfathomable.
Next, we unpack Jacinda Ardern’s date of birth…
365 Pin Code Birth Chart Analysis: Jacinda Ardern born 26.07.1980
Jacinda Ardern has a Number 6 life path [TSS-LFP], which when well lived, always links the person with much responsibility. Her Sun or Personal Attainment Number [see TKSPE, top left corner, 33//15//6 again aligns with the Number 6 (circled in yellow). Her Personal Number or Vibration is linked to the Number 8 [Born 26th; 26 = 2+6 = 8] which as a numerology number carries within it all the qualities required for the individual to be a natural leader of large groups of people / nations. Being born in the year 1980 [1980 = 1+9+8+0 = 18 = 1+8 = 9; 1980//18/9] beings the Number 9 energy in to play as her World or Career Number – the number 9 being linked with healing, humanity, consciousness, higher causes, forgiveness, unconditional love, philanthropy, serving others etc. Just these headline numbers within her 365 Pin Code Birth Chart tell enough. When the chips are down, when the pressure is on, when hard times have fallen upon everyone and when the needs of the people have to given top priority, she is most definitely the person you want at the helm.
365 Pin Code Pythagoras Square Birth Chart for Jacinda Ardern, born 26.07.1980
The above birth chart reveals that she has only one arrow, the Arrow of Activity. This arrow joins 7, 8 and 9. This is the arrow of great expression with the experience number (7) linking with the number of power and perceptiveness (8) and the number of consciousness and human responsibility (9). The one challenge which people who have this arrow can experience, given its extreme forcefulness, is hyperactivity. People with this arrow can easily become highly agitated as a result of suppressed nervous energy. The result is extreme nervousness or anxiety which can express itself through any number of ailments such as asthma, headaches, migraines, heart and circulatory problems. Given this, carriers of this arrow need to ensure their environment is predominantly peaceful and calm. They need to spend as much time as possible in Nature and are generally never happy city dwellers. Outdoor kinetic sports are very good for them as these help them discharge their tremendous energy into the earth.
From 2020 to 2028, Jacinda Ardern is in her Third Pinnacle 32//5
Before we feed all this data (and more) into our predictive numerology model, and reveal to you what her lines of experiential code are for 2020 and the years beyond, we need to being to your attention that from 2020 through to 2028, Jacinda Ardern enters her Third Pinnacle which is driven by the numerology number sequence 32//5. Her Third Challenge which runs concurrently (2020 to 2028) is linked with the Number 7 (born in July, 7) which brings family firmly into frame as well as the characteristics which headline this number, these being logic, mindset, critical thinking, analyses, seeking spiritually significant answers etc. To understand what the potential is around her 3rd Pinnacle 32//5 number sequence, let’s unpack what the number 32 signals… The number 32 as a “temporary numerology vibration” is almost always linked with a time period which is favourable for the individual. This is when the high goals which the person has been striving for, are reached, as is the recognition and honour which goes with them. Difficult situations are overcome, disputes are settled and almost always the individual ends up coming out on top and winning. The laurels of victory are yours if you remain untainted by the ego. So, whether the people of New Zealand know this right now or not, their current Prime Minister has just (as in 2020!) entered a nine-year period which, within her 365 Pin Code Numerology, is clearly signalling a superbly successful time. This does not mean that she will not have to deal with extreme challenges. Given the general state of the world right now, she will be faced with many more extreme challenges both this year, and especially during 2021. However, her 3rd pinnacle is positively coded for her to overcome these and to emerge triumphant. Given this, do you really want anyone else leading New Zealand for the next few years? We think not…
Now its time for us to reveal the data table to you which literally codes Jacinda’s life path experiences, from her birth, through to her death (whenever that may be)…
365 Pin Code Table of Annual Experience Numbers (AENs) for Jacinda Ardern born 26.07.1980
The above chart is loaded with lines of code, from 2006 through to 2032 – this was done for those who enjoy numbers and studying things much detail. The RED numbers which run within the light blue columns, are Jacinda Ardern’s AENs or Annual Experience Numbers. These numbers, if you will, give brilliant insight into what the dominant numerology theme of a given year will be. Where the RED number occurs just once, it means that the given theme is concentred into just that year. Where the same RED number repeats itself (e.g. 2020 RED 7; 2021 RED 7) it means those two years are governed, or themed, around the same AEN. Unlike a concentrated (i.e. one year only!) experience, which always brings about an extreme event / happening, having the same AEN spread over a few years represents a diluted effect, as the impact is felt over a number of years and not just one.
If you want to know how deadly accurate these lines of code are, just have a look at her 2018 line of code. Do you see that the Number 7 occurs just once? 2017 has a RED 2 and 2019 has a RED 6, so the RED AEN 7 of 2018 is “sandwiched” if you will between the other two. This is the “concentrated annual experience” which we had alluded to earlier and remember we mentioned that whenever this happens, something very significant happened? Ok, so now let’s apply our minds to this. Where does the Number 7 present itself within her 365 Pin Code Numerology charts? It’s her Family / Intimate Number (Birth MM, July = 7th month of the year). Surprised that 2018 was the year she gave birth? You shouldn’t be! This is how astonishingly accurate numerology is, when done well. Even more astonishing, is if you look at her 2017 line of code, at her RED AEN 2, which links / synchs with her Shadow / Emotional Family Number. Is 2017 not the year she fell pregnant? Of course it is! And though we haven’t revealed this fact to you in the complex data table further on in this article (to do so, we’d have had to list all her AENs from birth!), 2017 was the first time, since she was born that she had the AEN 2 in play! Go figure…
Additional proof supporting how visible some pregnancies are within the numbers, lies within the detailed research we did into Kylie Jenner’s pregnancy; her numbers, just like Jacinda’s, show that the pregnancy no “random event” but was always hardcoded into her numerology life path matrix, which was laid down as an Intelligent Mathematical Blueprint (IMB) the moment her date of birth, full birth name (and a few other critically important data points which we use in the modelling) were decided.
2020 and 2021 for Jacinda Ardern are driven by Karmic Number sequence 16/7
Now that you fully understand that the above data table is bulls-eye accurate, let’s turn our attention to Ardern’s 2020 and 2021. The AEN 7 is in frame for both years. The backing number which it stems from, is 16, karmic 16. What karmic 16 does is to literally “destroy” everything (mental paradigms) you thought and believed to be true, and deliver deeply spiritual experiences which cause you to have to reframe how you think (the 7) about everything. That’s why in Tarot, the number 16 major arcana, is The Tower being destroyed by lightning, which signals a time when the destruction of the material happens in order to force upon you circumstances which have you seeking for new, enlightened, answers. From just this, we can instantly gather that 2020 and 2021 are going to be just awful years for Jacinda Ardern. So far, 2020 has taken the world by storm with Covid-19 and everything about this pandemic has torn deeply into the fabric of society as we know it and related to it. Looking at Ardern’s 2021 is however deeply worrying, because the RED question marks link the number 4 and 7, which is our model are massively antagonistic numbers. Stated another way, 4 and 7 almost always bring about much chaos. The 4-7 which we’re referring to, also sits in Ardern’s professional physical world. The upshot of this is that 2021 is coded to be the most extremely demanding year of her career to-date. If she handles it well, 2022 (RED AEN 1) will deliver surprising professional emotional reward (see her birth chart, bottom right corner, TSSPR 10//1, circled)!
Only in 2023 will things begin to really turn for the better
We believe that her 16//7 coding for 2020 and 2021 proves how enormous the global impact of Covid-19 will be. Yes, right now she is being lauded as doing incredible things for New Zealand around Covid-19. However, New Zealand, like every other country, is massively dependent on the global economy, and, with what’s happening right now economic meltdown wise, guaranteed, New Zealanders are in for a very rough economic time post 2020. Does this mean they need to vote her out in their upcoming General Election? Absolutely not. Jacinda Ardern, is most definitely the empathetic leader New Zealand needs to see them through this economic bottleneck crisis. However, Jacinda Ardern and the people of New Zealand be warned, things are going to get much worse and only around 2023 will there be some form of a release. For Ardern, 2023 through to 2026 is a four-year AEN 4 driven period which synchs perfectly with her Primary Expression Number (number 4). This signals to us that she just needs to hold on and stay cool, calm and collected during these years of tectonic change, because, come 2023, the sun will begin to shine again.
Will Jacinda Ardern win the 2020 General Election?
And so, to return to the original question, will Jacinda Ardern win the 2020 General Election? Whilst it is a neck-on-neck election race, and will remain there right up until voting day, we believe there is a good probability that she will win. Why? Because, as explained earlier, she has just entered her 3rd Pinnacle 32//5 which means the numbers are favourable for her, long term, and, because hopefully the people of New Zealand realise that they already have a magnificent leader in place, so, given all the socio-economic upheaval which is on its way, what they need most is to keep her in power, as their PM. They need to trust that her every judgement call during the crisis years which loom, will be to put her people first, and that’s exactly what she will do because it’s coded into her numbers!