A Different Kind of Power

Professor Bruce Lloyd listened to the audio version of Jacinda Ardern’s Memoirs, published in 2025. Using ChatGPT, he wrote the following prompt.


Here’s a summary of A Different Kind of Power by Jacinda Ardern, followed by a critique—what works well, what doesn’t, and what questions it raises. If you like, I can also compare it to other recent political memoirs.

Summary

  • Author & Context
    Jacinda Ardern was Prime Minister of New Zealand from 2017 to 2023. The memoir was published in June 2025. PenguinRandomhouse.com+2Wikipedia+2
  • Chronological structure
    The book traces her life from her childhood—growing up in rural New Zealand in a Mormon family—through entry into politics, becoming Labour Party leader, major national crises (Christchurch mosque shootings, volcanic eruptions, COVID-19, etc.), to her decision to step down in 2023. Wikipedia+2The Guardian+2
  • Key themes
    • Kindness, empathy, and compassion as political virtues: Ardern argues that leadership needn’t be about brute power; it can draw strength from caring, humanity, and emotional openness. SheThePeople+3PenguinRandomhouse.com+3The Washington Post+3
    • Vulnerability: she shares moments of self-doubt, “thin-skinnedness”, the struggle with confidence, balancing motherhood and public office. Wikipedia+2SheThePeople+2
    • Crisis leadership: how she responded to unexpected major events—terror attack in Christchurch, pandemic, etc.—and how her values shaped those responses. The Washington Post+2The Guardian+2
    • Redefining power: suggesting that power does not have to be coercive or domineering; instead, it can be relational, caring, and even humble. PenguinRandomhouse.com+1
  • Notable revelations
  • Goals/Audience
    Ardern seems to aim not only to tell her own story, but to offer a model of leadership that others might emulate, especially those who believe that politics is better done with compassion. PenguinRandomhouse.com+1

Emotional honesty & narrative voice: Ardern is open about her fears, her personal life, and her vulnerabilities. This gives the memoir warmth, relatability, and credibility. Many reviewers praise this. ketebooks.co.nz+2The Washington Post+2

Limited depth in policy critique: Some critics say the book glosses over or omits serious evaluation of what didn’t work—e.g. housing, inflation, public discontent in later years. The Guardian+2SheThePeople+2

Is kindness enough?: The book raises the question of whether empathy + compassion are sufficient for political leadership, especially in complex, resource-scarce, high-stakes contexts. Critics worry that style may overshadow substance. SheThePeople+2The Times+2

Crisis management: The descriptions of how she handled the mosque attack, volcanic eruption, COVID-19 are vivid and show a leader making difficult decisions under pressure, trying to balance different kinds of harms. The Washington Post+1

Idealisation and narrative framing: Some reviewers argue that the memoir sometimes leans toward idealising her leadership, framing her decisions in a favorable light without fully exploring counterarguments or downsides. The Times+2SheThePeople+2

Audience & tone: The style is deeply personal and sometimes reflective rather than analytically rigorous. That’s fine for a memoir, but it means the book may not satisfy readers who want detailed policy analysis or political history.

Breaking norms: Her balancing of motherhood and leadership, leading with empathy, being transparent about self-doubt—all help challenge conventional expectations of what political leaders “should” be. That itself is a contribution. The Guardian+1

Lack of sustained critical self-analysis: While she admits doubts and misgivings, there are few passages showing her engaging in a deep post-mortem of policy decisions that had negative outcomes or strong public criticism. SheThePeople+1

Legacy & impact: It’s still early to measure how much of her model of “kind leadership” can produce long-term structural change. Reviewers debate whether her legacy will be symbolic or substantive.

Readable, engaging storytelling: The memoir is praised for being well written, emotionally engaging, sometimes humorous, and able to humanise large political decisions. ketebooks.co.nz+1

Simplification for narrative coherence: To make the story flow, some complexity is smoothed over. Some issues are less explored (e.g. detailed tensions within her party, trade-offs made under political constraints). SheThePeople

Global vs local expectations: Because she has international visibility, some parts of the book seem aimed at a global audience (e.g. emphasis on leadership, values). This raises tension: what works for New Zealand’s political context may not transfer so well elsewhere.

Overall Impressions & Reflections

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