New Zealand PM apologises for pulling woman’s hair

Prime minister says sorry after waitress accused him of bullying her for six months

New Zealand prime minister John Key apologised for “bit of banter” after realising the woman had taken offence to repeatedly having her hair pulled over a six-month period. Photograph: Marty Melville/AFP/Getty Images
New Zealand prime minister John Key apologised for “bit of banter” after realising the woman had taken offence to repeatedly having her hair pulled over a six-month period. Photograph: Marty Melville/AFP/Getty Images

New Zealand prime minister John Key apologised on Wednesday for pulling the ponytail of a waitress who later accused him of bullying, media reported.

The unnamed waitress in an Auckland cafe said on a blog site that Mr Key had pulled her hair over several months and initially she thought he was being “playful and jolly”.

However, she said Key kept pulling her hair when he visited the cafe over a six-month period and she became increasingly annoyed.

“He was like the schoolyard bully tugging on the little girl’s hair trying to get a reaction, experiencing that feeling of power over her,” the waitress said in the blog.

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She said she finally confronted Key in late March and threatened to hit him if he did not stop. She said Key returned to the cafe and gave her two bottles of red wine and said sorry.

Key, en route to Turkey for the commemoration of first World War battles, said he visited the cafe, close to his house, often and he had a “fun relationship” with the staff.

“There’s always lots of horsing around and sort of practical jokes and that’s all there really was to it,” he told reporters during a stopover in Los Angeles.

“. . . I realised she had actually taken offence because it was all in the context of a bit of banter that was going on and so I obviously immediately apologised for that.”