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New Zealand prime minister surprises many with resignation

John Key said he was stepping down because in order to spend more time with his family and less time in front of a camera.

By Stephen Feller
New Zealand Prime Minister John Key, pictured during a meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama in the Oval Office in 2014, surprised many in his country, including some of the politicians we works closest with, when he resigned from his position to spend more time with his family. He said the early resignation will allow the nation and the party to rally around a new leader ahead of elections next year. File photo by Dennis Brack/Pool/UPI
New Zealand Prime Minister John Key, pictured during a meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama in the Oval Office in 2014, surprised many in his country, including some of the politicians we works closest with, when he resigned from his position to spend more time with his family. He said the early resignation will allow the nation and the party to rally around a new leader ahead of elections next year. File photo by Dennis Brack/Pool/UPI | License Photo

AUCKLAND, New Zealand, Dec. 5 (UPI) -- New Zealand's prime minister, John Key, surprised many in his party and across the country Monday when he announced his resignation from the post more than a year before he was expected to run for reelection.

Key said Monday he was resigning after eight years as prime minister to spend more time with his family, as well as to give the government and his party time to rally around a new leader before next year's elections.

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"I have never seen myself as a career politician," Key said of the decision, which was not revealed to many of his closest political colleagues until just before the announcement. "I have certainly never wanted my success in politics to be measured by how long I spent in parliament."

Key and his National Party have maintained high approval ratings in the last eight years after being elected with just under 50 percent of voters supporting them, and many expected they would win the 2017 elections sometime before next November.

Part of Key's popularity is built on his careful handling of the global financial crisis in 2008 and rebuilding of the country after a 2011 earthquake.

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Key recommended Bill English, his finance minister, to take over the party and prime minister job. When asked if he would accept the nomination, English noted it had only been a few hours since Key announced he was stepping down, but said he was "not ruling it out."

"I think we need to just give ourselves a bit of space," English said. "I personally would like to talk to members of the caucus, talk to my family and consider it. But I certainly appreciate John's endorsement."

Key said he plans to keep living in New Zealand, but will seek positions on corporate or other boards and accept speaking engagements, but otherwise likely live outside the spotlight.

"I'm quite happy to have a life where I'm not in front of the camera," Key said. "In fact, my aim is to have a life where I'm quite subterraneal, actually, going forward."

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