logo
BREAKING NEWS Jacinda Ardern's swipe at Donald Trump as she declares the world is an 'all out dumpster fire' - and reveals how we can change it forever

BREAKING NEWS Jacinda Ardern's swipe at Donald Trump as she declares the world is an 'all out dumpster fire' - and reveals how we can change it forever

Daily Mail​19-05-2025
Jacinda Ardern has re-entered the political fray with a rallying call for internationalism, rebuking the inward outlook of the United States under President Donald Trump.
The popular former New Zealand prime minister spoke at Yale College's Class Day on Monday (Australian time), the undergraduate arm of the prestigious Ivy League university.
Dame Jacinda, who has lived in the US as a Harvard-based fellow since late 2023, said she opted against 'the usual pep talk that perhaps you might expect' in an address witnessed by thousands.
'Suddenly didn't feel enough. Not when the world, over the course of a few short months, moved from tumultuous to an all-out dumpster fire,' she said.
'There are challenges to rules around trade, increases in migration flows and a decreasing regard for civil rights and human rights, including the right to be who you are,' she said.
'Not to mention an environment rife with mis- and disinformation fuelling not what I would characterise as polarisation, but entrenchment.
'We're living in a time where the small are made to feel smaller and those with power loom large.'
'There's the war in the Middle East and Europe, with both leaving questions over our sense of humanity.
'The daily reminder of climate change that bangs on our door but falls on deaf ears at the highest echelons of power.
'Challenges to rules around trade, increases in migration flows, and a decreasing regard for civil rights and human rights, including the right to be who you are.'
Dame Jacinda said the world stood at an 'inflection point in global politics', fuelled by post-pandemic economic challenges, when politicians needed to care for the most vulnerable.
'Some of the greatest leaders here in the United States have recognised that amongst all of the challenges politicians face, they must meet the most basic needs of their citizens, first and foremost,' she said.
'FDR (former president Franklin D Roosevelt) said in 1944 while still governing a country at war, 'true individual freedom cannot exist without economic security and independence. People who are hungry and out of a job are the stuff of which dictatorships are made'.'
Dame Jacinda supported unsuccessful Democratic candidate for president Kamala Harris in the 2024 presidential election, appearing at party events.
In a thinly veiled attack on Trump's America First economic doctrine, Dame Jacinda said isolationism was an 'illusion'.
'You cannot remain untouched by the impacts of infectious disease. A trade stand-off can never just hurt your competitors,' she said.
'A warming planet does not produce extreme weather that respects borders, and far-flung wars may not take the lives of your citizens but it will take away their sense of security and humanity.
'We are connected. We always have been.'
The 44-year-old said 'to be outwardly looking is not unpatriotic' and 'in this time of crisis and chaos, leading with empathy is a strength'.
'Now more than ever, we must restate these lessons of the past. Remind one another that to be outwardly looking is not unpatriotic, to seek solutions to global problems is not a zero sum game where your nation loses, that upholding a rules based order is not nostalgic or of another era, and crucially, that in this time of crisis and chaos leading with empathy is a strength.
'Empathy has never started a war, never sought to take the dignity of others, and empathy teaches you that power is interchangeable with another word, responsibility.'
Dame Jacinda has become a worldwide poster child for empathetic leadership since her response to New Zealand's worst modern-day mass shooting, the Christchurch Mosques massacre, in 2019.
Since leaving office, she has made few incursions back into public life, but is expected to expand on her time in office in her memoir, A Different Kind of Power, released in June by Penguin Random House subsidiary Crown.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Photos from a street festival of circus performers in the Russian town of Staritsa
Photos from a street festival of circus performers in the Russian town of Staritsa

The Independent

time2 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Photos from a street festival of circus performers in the Russian town of Staritsa

From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or producing our latest documentary, 'The A Word', which shines a light on the American women fighting for reproductive rights, we know how important it is to parse out the facts from the messaging. At such a critical moment in US history, we need reporters on the ground. Your donation allows us to keep sending journalists to speak to both sides of the story. The Independent is trusted by Americans across the entire political spectrum. And unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock Americans out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. We believe quality journalism should be available to everyone, paid for by those who can afford it. Your support makes all the difference.

Republicans tell Trump to ‘grow up' after he sacks data chief
Republicans tell Trump to ‘grow up' after he sacks data chief

Telegraph

time5 minutes ago

  • Telegraph

Republicans tell Trump to ‘grow up' after he sacks data chief

Republicans have told Donald Trump to 'grow up' after he sacked the US government's top statistician over underwhelming jobs numbers. The president said on Friday he would remove Erika McEntarfer as commissioner of the Bureau of Labour Statistics (BLS) shortly after government figures indicated the economy was performing worse than expected. The move has prompted a rare backlash against Mr Trump from members of his own party. Cynthia Lummis, a Republican senator for Wyoming, told NBC News that deciding to sack Ms McEntarfer before establishing the accuracy of the employment figures was 'kind of impetuous'. 'If the president is firing the statistician because he doesn't like the numbers but they are accurate, then that's a problem,' she continued. 'It's not the statistician's fault if the numbers are accurate and that they're not what the president had hoped for.' Thom Tillis, who represents North Carolina, said: 'If she was just fired because the president or whoever decided to fire the director just did it because they didn't like the numbers, they ought to grow up'. In the past, Mr Trump has taken an uncompromising attitude to critics in his own party, publicly threatening to back primary challenges to replace them with loyalists. Mr Tillis said in June that he would not run for re-election. Rand Paul, a Kentucky senator and former presidential primary contender, raised concerns about the politicisation of government data. 'We have to look somewhere for objective statistics. When the people providing the statistics are fired, it makes it much harder to make judgments that you know, the statistics won't be politicised,' he said. 'I'm going to look into it, but [my] first impression is that you can't really make the numbers different or better by firing the people doing the counting.' Democrats have also condemned the president's move. Chuck Schumer, the party's leader in the Senate, criticised Mr Trump's 'shoot the messenger' response in a speech on Friday. Mr Trump has long been suspicious of the BLS, claiming last year that it inflated the jobs numbers during former president Joe Biden's administration in an attempt to swing the election for the Democrats. He announced via social media on Friday that he was sacking Ms McEntarfer, labelling her a 'Biden political appointee' even though she is a career civil servant and was confirmed by a bipartisan vote in January 2024. Among those who voted to confirm her were former senators JD Vance, now the US vice-president, and Marco Rubio, the secretary of state. Some Republicans have backed the president's move, including Roger Marshall, a Kansas senator, who was one of the 85 senators who confirmed her last year. 'Her cooked-up numbers have misled the American people for too long,' he claimed. The US created just 73,000 new jobs in July, considerably fewer than the predicted 110,000, while the figures for May and June were slashed by 258,000 combined, according to the BLS report released on Friday. Mr Trump hit out at the bureau as stock markets tumbled, branding the figures revision a 'major mistake' and adding: 'Important numbers like this must be fair and accurate, they can't be manipulated for political purposes.' Ms McEntarfer would be replaced with 'someone much more competent and qualified', he said, insisting the economy was 'BOOMING'. For now, BLS deputy commissioner William Wiatrowski is serving as acting commissioner.

Musk's latest venture blasted as 'vanity project for the wealthy'
Musk's latest venture blasted as 'vanity project for the wealthy'

Daily Mail​

time32 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Musk's latest venture blasted as 'vanity project for the wealthy'

By Nashville is getting a makeover all thanks to business mogul Elon Musk. Musk's Boring Company, has plans to build a massive underground tunnel in Tennessee and it seems he has the support of many major Tennessee lawmakers on a federal level, but not so much from local leaders. What one representative called a 'vanity project for the wealthy' has been dubbed the 'Music City Loop'. It will span 10 miles from city center to the airport on Nashville's south east corridor, its entrance just steps from the airport. The privately funded project will supposedly shuttle Tennesseans between downtown and the airport in only eight minutes. The company plans to use electric vehicles to connect city hotspots, similar to an already operating Boring system in Las Vegas . Musk and Boring Company seemed to have the full support of Republican lawmakers, who demonstrated their support at a press conference about the project on July 28. Republican Tennessee Governor Bill Lee attended, and expressed his excitement for the endeavor. 'They could have taken their next underground loop anywhere, but they saw something unique about Tennessee,' he said. 'The best part of all of it is it's 100 percent privately funded. There will be no cost to Tennessee taxpayers.' But, John Ray Clemens, chair of the Tennessee House Democratic Caucus, called the privately funded endeavor 'fiscally irresponsible and legally suspect'. 'No responsible executive would give away unrestricted and unlimited underground property rights to an unhinged billionaire, who Donald Trump doesn't even trust anymore, and grant him and his company exclusive access rights beneath our city and a monopoly to profit in perpetuity.' The project has yet to receive approval from the Metro Nashville Council or the mayor's office, and Nashville Mayor Freddie O'Connell was notably absent from the event. In a brief statement about the project, he said: 'We are aware of the state's conversations with The Boring Company, and we have a number of operational questions to understand the potential impacts on Metro and Nashvillians.' Yet, United States Senator Marsha Blackburn seemed to think the impact would be overwhelmingly positive. She posted on X that the company 'couldn't have picked a better new home for their state-of-the-art tunneling technology than Nashville'. She wrote: 'I look forward to seeing the tremendous impact of this investment in our city!' State Representative Aftyn Behn called the tunnel a 'privatization of public infrastructure,' noting that it was designed to benefit a select few 'not the people who actually live and work here'. In his press release about the 'Music City Loop' Behn wrote, 'It's a vanity project for the wealthy, and once again, the Lee administration is rolling out the red carpet for billionaires while working families are stuck in traffic.' 'We rank at the bottom in livability, and yet instead of investing in roads, schools and transit that benefit everyday Tennesseans, they're floating billion-dollar boondoggles for the ultra-rich,' stated state Senator Heidi Campbell The decision seems to be just as divisive among citizens as it is among local lawmakers. Many took to social media following the press conference to chime in with their opinions. Reacting to coverage of the press conference on Reddit , one user posted: 'And the grift continues. This isn't a much needed or desirable project. 'This is a grift meant to line the pockets of the world's richest person. The goal was never providing a decent or even acceptable transit service.' Another commented: 'Could've had a great light rail system and instead get this utter nonsense.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store