Ginny Andersen

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The Honourable
Ginny Andersen
MP
File:Profile--ginnyandersen-3-390x2-UNC.jpg
Andersen in 2023
52nd Minister of Justice
In office
24 July 2023 – 27 November 2023
Prime Minister Chris Hipkins
Preceded by Kiri Allan
Succeeded by Paul Goldsmith
42nd Minister of Police
In office
20 March 2023 – 27 November 2023
Prime Minister Chris Hipkins
Preceded by Megan Woods
Succeeded by Mark Mitchell
2nd Minister for the Digital Economy and Communications
In office
1 February 2023 – 27 November 2023
Prime Minister Chris Hipkins
Preceded by David Clark
Succeeded by Judith Collins
14th Minister for Seniors
In office
1 February 2023 – 27 November 2023
Prime Minister Chris Hipkins
Preceded by Ayesha Verrall
Succeeded by Casey Costello
Member of the New Zealand Parliament
Assumed office
23 September 2017
Constituency List (2023–present)
Hutt South (2020–23)
List (2017–20)
Personal details
Born 1975 (age 48–49)
New Zealand
Political party Labour
Spouse(s) Geoff Gwyn
Relations Bill Andersen (great-uncle)
Children 4
Alma mater University of Canterbury
Website Labour Party profile

Virginia Ruby Andersen[1][2][3] (born 1975)[4] is a New Zealand politician. She has been a Member of Parliament in the House of Representatives for the Labour Party since the 2017 New Zealand general election.

Andersen held the offices of Minister of Police and Minister of Justice in the final months of the Sixth Labour Government.

Early life and career

Andersen was born in 1975.[4] Her parents were both teachers at low-decile schools around the country and her childhood was spent all over New Zealand including Great Barrier Island, Hawke's Bay, Wairarapa before settling in Christchurch where she attended Phillipstown School and later Avonside Girls' High School. Her high school principal was Marian Hobbs, who later became a cabinet minister under Helen Clark. Bill Andersen, a noted activist and trade union leader, was her great-uncle.[5]

While living in the Christchurch suburb of Linwood, Anderson became aware of the negative social impacts of gangs and drugs which were present in the area. She "grew up with kids whose parents were on methadone" and "had friends who took their life at a really young age because the parents were ... addict[s]”.[6]

After leaving school, she studied political science and Māori at the University of Canterbury, becoming fluent in te reo Māori,[7] before spending three years traveling overseas.[6] On her return to New Zealand, she continued her studies completing a master's degree in political science in 2004. Her thesis addressed indigenous self-determination based on the Crown's Treaty settlement with Ngai Tahu.[8]

Following that, she worked at the Office of Treaty Settlements, and in 2004, became private secretary for Margaret Wilson on treaty negotiations. After that, she became a political adviser for David Cunliffe and then Trevor Mallard.[6][9]

Andersen wanted a family, which she felt was incompatible with the long work hours in Parliament,[6] so in 2006, took a job with the New Zealand Police. She was employed as a policy unit manager focussing on gang problems, and organised crime. She became a strategic adviser on Māori, Pacific and ethnic services with a focus on reducing Māori reoffending. When John Key became prime minister, she was seconded to the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet to work on the Methamphetamine Action Plan.[10] She also worked on the government's Vehicle Confiscation and Seizure Bill which enabled vehicles owned by boy racers to be crushed.[11] In a 2023 interview, Andersen stated that working under Key's National Party government as a public servant was her inspiration to run for election as a Labour candidate.[6]

Early political career

At the 2008 election Andersen was a campaign volunteer for her former Beehive colleague Chris Hipkins, who was the Labour candidate in the Remutaka electorate.[6] Hipkins was successful and Andersen was his campaign manager for the 2011 election.[11] She was selected as a Labour candidate for the 2014 election, running in the Ōhāriu electorate and placed 37 on the Labour Party list.[1][12] She was not elected, but her loss to the long-standing incumbent, Peter Dunne of United Future, was by only 710 votes, the third lowest margin in the country.[13] She was ranked at 37 on the Labour Party list.

After the election, Andersen served as the Labour Party's vice president from 2015 to 2017, when she stood down to focus on her parliamentary candidacy for the 2017 general election. In October 2016, Andersen was selected as Labour's candidate for the electorate of Hutt South for the 2017 election over Hutt City Councillor Campbell Barry and list candidate Sarah Packer.[1] She replaced long-serving member of parliament Trevor Mallard as the Labour Party candidate who had, in July of that year, said he would serve as a list-only candidate for the election with the intention of becoming Speaker of the House.[1][2][14]

Member of Parliament

Parliament of New Zealand
Years Term Electorate List Party
2017–2020 52nd List 28 Labour
2020–2023 53rd Hutt South 45 Labour
2023–present 54th List 17 Labour


Sixth Labour Government, 2017–2023

While Andersen lost the Hutt South election to National Party candidate Chris Bishop, she entered parliament via the party list, ranked at 28 for Labour.[15] In her first term, Andersen was a member of the justice committee and the deputy chair of the governance and administration committee.[16]

Andersen was responsible for the Holidays (Bereavement Leave for Miscarriage) Amendment Bill, a private member's bill that proposed allowing people who have suffered a miscarriage with three days paid bereavement leave. The bill was selected for debate in 2018 and passed unanimously in 2021.[17][18][19] The bill made New Zealand one of the first countries in the world to provide specific paid leave for miscarriage bereavements.[20][21]

In September 2020, controversy arose over the unusual arrangements for Andersen's office space rented by the Labour Party in Hutt South.[22] Rent for MPs' offices are paid by Parliamentary Services. However, a sublease arrangement, which had been in place for decades under Andersen's predecessor Trevor Mallard, meant that Parliamentary Services (using public money) were paying the Labour Party $6,000 per annum to cover the rent, but the Labour Party was only paying the landlord, the New Zealand Professional Firefighters Union (NZPFU), $1,500 a year. The $4,500 overpayment went to the Labour Party which used it for campaigning and other expenses.[22][23] Once the arrangement became public, Andersen cancelled it.[24]

At the 2020 New Zealand general election, Andersen was again Labour's candidate for Hutt South,[25] and defeated National's Chris Bishop by 3,777 votes.[26][27] In her second term, Andersen was appointed the chair of the justice committee.[16]

On 31 January 2023, in a Cabinet reshuffle marking the appointment of Chris Hipkins as prime minister, Andersen was promoted into the Cabinet. She was named Minister for the Digital Economy and Communications, Minister for Small Business, Minister for Seniors, Associate Minister of Immigration and the Associate Minister for Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations.[28] Andersen picked up two additional appointments following scandals involving two other ministers. She became Minister of Police on 20 March 2023 following the dismissal of Stuart Nash[29] and Minister of Justice following Kiri Allan's resignation on 23 July 2023.[30]

As minister, Andersen oversaw the progress of reforms related to digital identity,[31] legal aid,[32] and public safety.[33][34] Her ministerial tenure came after incidents of ram-raiding burglaries increased 400% over five years.[35] As small business and police minister, Andersen was involved in the rollout of fog cannons to protect small business owners and introduced new legislation that made ram-raiding an offence under the Crimes Act 1961.[33][36] As small business minister, she chaired a meeting of the OECD committee on SMEs and entrepreneurship in Paris in June 2023.[37]

Opposition, 2023–present

During the 2023 New Zealand general election on 14 October, Andersen lost her Hutt South seat to National Party candidate Chris Bishop by a margin of 1,332 votes.[38] Andersen however was re-elected to Parliament as a list MP.[39] Labour lost the election and Andersen was assigned opposition spokesperson roles in the police, prevention of family and sexual violence, social investment, and associate social development portfolios.[40]

In early November 2023, Andersen was the subject of a Labour Party investigation after a complaint that she had bullied a female teenaged Labour Party volunteer over a period of three years. Andersen yelled at the female volunteer and her brother at a Labour Party Lower Hutt election night event on 14 October. According to the complaint, Andersen was angry that the teenager had not knocked on enough doors during the 2023 election campaign. Andersen subsequently issued a statement apologising for the hurt that her comments had caused and resolved to fully engage in the process to resolve the matter.[41][42] On 13 November, Andersen apologised to the complainant and her daughter.[43] That same day, Andersen was the subject of a second complaint by a male volunteer, who alleged Andersen had bullied and "bodyshamed" him. Andersen disputed the bullying allegations.[44]

On 5 December 2023, Andersen was granted retention of the title The Honourable, in recognition of her term as a member of the Executive Council.[45]

Personal life

Andersen lives in Belmont, Lower Hutt.[46] She enjoys practising yoga.[6] She is married to Geoff Gwyn, a former police inspector, whom she met while working for the Police prior to becoming an MP.[47][48] They have two children together, but also parent her husband's two older children from a previous relationship.[6]

References

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  7. Hon Ginny Andersen, Labour Party website
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  46. Upper Hutt Leader, 2 August 2017 https://www.pressreader.com/new-zealand/upper-hutt-leader/20170802/281840053747806
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External links

  • Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons
Political offices
Preceded by Minister of Police
2023
Succeeded by
Mark Mitchell
Preceded by Minister for Seniors
2023
Succeeded by
Casey Costello
Preceded by Minister for the Digital Economy and Communications
2023
Succeeded by
Judith Collins
Preceded by Minister for Small Business
2023
Succeeded by
Melissa Lee
New Zealand Parliament
Preceded by Member of Parliament for Hutt South
2020–2023
Succeeded by
Chris Bishop
Party political offices
Preceded by
Robert Gallagher
Vice-President of the New Zealand Labour Party
2015–2017
Succeeded by
Beth Houston