By Ana Nicolaci da Costa and Charlotte Greenfield
WELLINGTON, Oct 7 (Reuters) – A possible Labour-Green coalition narrowed the gap with the ruling National Party in New Zealand’s final election tally on Saturday, strengthening their position in formal talks next week with a small nationalist party to form a government.
The final Sept. 23 election results confirmed New Zealand First, led by the outspoken and unpredictable Winston Peters, holds the balance of power in the formation of a coalition.
National won 56 seats and Labour and Greens together took 54 seats, leaving them both reliant on New Zealand First’s nine seats to meet the 61 seats needed for a majority in parliament in New Zealand’s proportional representation system.
National lost two seats to the Labour-Green bloc compared with preliminary results – a development which Labour leader Jacinda Ardern said buoyed their position at the negotiating table.
“We will continue our negotiations in earnest with potential support parties beginning this weekend,” Ardern told reporters in Auckland.
“This now means that we have a strengthened mandate to negotiate and form a durable, stable coalition government.”
Ardern, 37, took over the Labour leadership nearly two months before the election, quickly drawing comparisons with youthful, cosmopolitan leaders like Canada´s Justin Trudeau and France´s Emmanuel Macron. She has almost single-handedly brought Labour to within reach of forming government.
New Zealand First’s Peters has said he would only make a decision on which party to back after the final tally and after the results become official on Oct. 12.
Prime Minister Bill English told reporters in Queestown that the final results did not change the nature of the negotiations, which would now likely focus on the economy.
“I don’t think it weakens it significantly at all,” he said, referring to National’s negotiating position. “The fundamentals haven’t altered, and that is National has significantly more seats than Labour, we are larger than a Labour-Greens combination.”
POLICIES
If New Zealand First chooses to go with Labour, which are thought to have more in common in terms of policy, the gain in seats for the Labour-Greens bloc would make it easier for Peters to justify the move, analysts said.
Both parties have said they want to curb immigration, renegotiate certain trade deals and adjust the role of the central bank albeit in different ways.
“If Labour, the Greens and NZ First had formed a government with a majority of one (seat)…that wouldn’t have sat comfortably with many people,” Richard Shaw, politics professor at Massey University, refering to preliminary results.
A Labour, Greens, NZ First coalition would now hold a three-seat majority after the final tally.
But some say Peters could be swayed to go to National given it would be a straightforward coalition between two parties.
Peters, a veteran New Zealand politician who has now held the balance of power three times, has in past elections formed coalition governments with both the National Party and Labour.
The National Party won 44.4 percent of the votes, the Labour Party 36.9 percent, New Zealand First 7.2 percent, the Green Party 6.3 percent. (Reporting by Ana Nicolaci da Costa and Charlotte Greenfield; Editing by Michael Perry)
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