Ardern and Bhutto: Two leaders, two very different pregnancies
AUCKLAND: Instagram posts, national excitement and well-wishing from political rivals: Jacinda Ardern’s journey to motherhood was very different to that made three decades earlier by Pakistani Prime Minister Benazir Bhutto, the only other world leader to have given birth while in office.
Ardern’s daughter came into the world on Thursday, 28 years after the late Bhutto’s daughter Bakhtawar was born.
New Zealand’s youngest-ever prime minister announced her pregnancy in January, posting a symbolic photo on social media and sparking warm words from across the political spectrum.
“I’ll be prime minister and a mum,” she said on Facebook, adding that her partner Clarke Gayford, who hosts a television fishing show, would be a “stay-at-home dad”.
“I think it’s fair to say that this will be a wee one that a village will raise, but we couldn’t be more excited,” she added.
The intervening months have seen a frenzy of excitement from New Zealanders, many of whom took to the web on Thursday to express their happiness.
Twitter user @zaichishka, who describes herself as a Welsh-Kiwi, wrote: “4.693 million New Zealanders (give or take) just became aunts and uncles.”
‘Delivered democracy, also delivered a baby’
It was all a far cry from 1990, when Bhutto, the first woman to head a democratic government in a Muslim-majority nation, told almost no-one she was pregnant until Bakhtawar was born on January 25.
“None of us in the cabinet virtually knew that this prime minister was about to deliver a baby,” Javed Jabbar, a member of her cabinet, told the BBC recently.
“And then lo-and-behold suddenly we learn that she has not only gone and delivered democracy she’s also delivered a baby.”
Opposition leader Syeda Abida Hussain had called Bhutto “greedy” for wanting to have “motherhood, domesticity, glamour and whole responsibility” rather than make sacrifices for her country.
News that Ardern was expecting prompted then New Zealand opposition leader Bill English to send his congratulations and hope that she was given “the space to be able to conduct relatively normal family life”.