Three months after being sworn in as New Zealandโs Prime Minister on October 25, Jacinda Ardern has announced that she is expecting her first child.
โClarke [Gayford] and I are really excited that in June our team will expand from two to three, and that weโll be joining the many parents out there who wear two hats,โ she wrote on Facebook.
โIโll be Prime Minister AND a mum, and Clarke will be โfirst man of fishingโ and stay at home dad. I think itโs fair to say that this will be a wee one that a village will raise, but we couldnโt be more excited.โ
At 37 years old, Prime Minister Ardern is the youngest-ever leader of the New Zealand Labor party, and her rise to political supremacy has been likened to the success of world leaders Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and French President Emmanuel Macron.

Ardern in action.
^^ Side note: letโs draw attention to the elephant/lack of women in this room.
As reported by the ABC, before announcing her pregnancy, Ardern had been asked about how motherhood may impact her position as Prime Minister of New Zealand (for argumentโs sake, letโs just point out here that a man would NEVER be asked this question. Infinite eyerollsโฆ)
โA lot of women in New Zealand feel like they have to make a choice between having babies and having a career, or continuing their career at a certain point in their lives,โ she told The Project NZ.

^^ Just another day for women in politics.
However, when grilled by a NZ radio show pannelist about whether it is โOK for a PM to take maternity leave while in officeโ, Ardern served the journalist a proverbial back-hand.
โIt is unacceptable,โ she swiftly retorted. โIt is a womanโs decision about when they choose to have children.โ
โIt should not predetermine whether they are given a job or have job opportunities.โ

^^Our thoughts, exactly.
Regardless of your role โ be it a school teacher, hairdresser or even the Prime Minister โ having children, subsequently taking maternity leave and keeping at your career, should NOT be a contentious, gender-driven conversation.
If anything, conversations surrounding maternity leave should centre around eligibility and entitlements โ yโknow, grown-up stuff.
According to Fair Work Ombudsman, all employees in Australia are entitled to parental leave.
Employees are able to take parental leave if they:
Have worked for their employer for at least 12 months
Before the date or expected date of birth if the employee is pregnant
Before the date of the adoption, or
When the leave starts (if the leave is taken after another person cares for the child or takes parental leave)
have or will have responsibility for the care of a child
For more information about your maternity, or paternity, leave entitlements, visit fairwork.gov.au.