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New Zealand leaders line up to woo kingmaker Peters

Leader of the National Party Bill English speaks to supporters at the party's election event at SkyCity Convention Centre in Auckland on September 23, 2017

Both of New Zealand's major political parties moved to open coalition negotiations with maverick MP Winston Peters Sunday after the country's general election stalemate left him in the position of kingmaker. However, conservative Prime Minister Bill English appeared to be in the driving seat to form government due to tensions among the opposition parties that would need to unite to unseat him. English's National Party performed strongly in Saturday's election to claim 46.0 percent of the vote or 58 seats, three short of the 61 needed to win. The main opposition Labour Party, led by charismatic newcomer Jacinda Ardern, polled a disappointing 35.8 percent to take 45 seats, although that rises to 52 if the seven seats of close ally the Greens are included. It means that both English and Ardern need the nine seats held by Peters' New Zealand First party to get over the line and reach the majority required to form government. Peters, a populist 72-year-old who has played kingmaker in two previous elections, has given no indication of who he will support. He was holed up in his North Island electorate Sunday awaiting calls from English and Ardern pitching their case for his support. Asked why Peters should support English, National campaign director Steven Joyce said his party's 46 percent of the vote clearly showed the New Zealand public preferred it over Labour. "We'll be able to work well with New Zealand First, there's a number of our people have good relationships with not just Winston but his team," he told TVNZ. "So let's just see how that plays out. The prime minister will start on that today." Labour campaign director Phil Twyford said Peters, known for his anti-immigration and protectionist policies, had more in common with the centre-left party than National. "It's about who can put together a majority and I believe that we're well and truly in the game," he told the state broadcaster. "There's much more policy alignment between New Zealand First and Labour. They're committed to a much more hands-on approach to economic management." An added difficulty for Ardern's Labour is that it must bring together two bitter foes in Peters and the Greens if it is to gain office. The Greens angered Peters by labelling his anti-immigration rhetoric racist earlier this year and he warned there would be "consequences". Greens leader James Shaw appeared downbeat about the prospect of the notoriously cranky septuagenarian forgetting past differences to join Labour and the Greens. "Look, it's not likely right, but if you look at the fact that the three opposition parties together have 61 seats... it is possible, we could form a government," he said. "As everyone says it's ultimately up to Winston Peters."