New Zealand PM John Key in shock resignation
Popular leader says it's right time to go after eight years leading nation
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Wellington: Popular New Zealand Prime Minister John Key announced his
shock resignation Monday, saying it was the right time to go after
eight years in the job.
"This is the hardest decision I've ever
made and I don't know what I'll do next," he told a news conference,
adding that he had never seen himself as a career politician.
"Being leader of both the party and the country has been an incredible experience."
Key,
a former Merrill Lynch currency trader, had recently marked his eighth
anniversary as prime minister and 10th year as leader of the
centre-right National Party, which is set to meet next week to elect his
successor.
Deputy Prime Minister Bill English is widely seen as the favourite to take over.
"I
feel like I'm going out on top," Key said, pointing to spending more
time with his wife Bronagh and children Stephanie and Max as a key
consideration.
"It would be easy to say I have made this decision
solely to rediscover the personal and family life I once had, and that
is a factor, but it is one among many," he said.
"Over the years I
have observed many leaders who, in a similar position, fail to take
this step. I can understand why. It is a hard job to leave.
"But, for me and the National Party, this is a good time to go. Party membership is high and the party is well-funded.
"The
caucus is talented and eager to serve, and one of the achievements of
which I am proud is having built with my colleagues a Cabinet team that
is capable, committed and cohesive. That is a great legacy for
National's next leader."
Key came into politics relatively late,
entering parliament in 2002 and assuming leadership of the National
Party four years later. By 2008 he had ended nine years of Labour Party
rule, ousting then-prime minister Helen Clark.
He won plaudits for
his leadership during a string of crises in his first term, including a
devastating earthquake in Christchurch in February 2011 which claimed
185 lives.
He also steadied the economy after the Global Financial
Crisis without resorting to hard-line spending cuts, instead taking a
steady, pragmatic approach that saw the budget return to surplus for the
first time since 2008.
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