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Elections / 2017 / [67] / Ginny Andersen
Portrait of Ginny Andersen
Photo via Wikipedia
2017 general election Sitting MP
Standing for [67]

Ginny Andersen

Kind
Electorate & list
Source
elections-wikipedia
As of
4 May 2026

Background

Research run #197 · 10 Jun 2026
Every claim below traces to a verbatim quote in the cited source. Click any footnote [1] in the prose, or expand the citation index below, to see where the fact came from.

Ginny Andersen is a New Zealand Labour Party politician who has served as a Member of Parliament since 2017 [34].

Andersen attended Avonside Girls' High School, according to a single secondary source [22], where she was also Head Girl [20]. She went on to study at Canterbury University [23], and according to a single secondary source, pursued Te Reo Māori studies at university level [24].

Before entering Parliament, Andersen worked as an employee of New Zealand Police [5], with a single secondary source indicating roles that included non-sworn policy team staff member [11], strategic adviser on Māori, Pacific and ethnic services [18][19], Senior Advisor [2], and Policy Manager at Police National Headquarters [1]. She also, according to a single secondary source, worked as a secondee at the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet on the Tackling Methamphetamine Action Plan [14]. A single secondary source further indicates she held a negotiations and policy role in the Office of Treaty Settlements [7]. Andersen also served as a private secretary in Parliament [13] and as a senior political adviser in Parliament [16]. According to a single secondary source, she taught Te Reo Māori as a night class teacher through Adult and Community Education [10].

According to a single secondary source, Andersen became affiliated with the Labour Party from as early as 2004 [51], and served as vice president of the Labour Party from 2015 [21]. She entered Parliament as a Member of Parliament in 2017 [34], and according to a single secondary source, won the Hutt South electorate seat from 2020 [36].

During her parliamentary career, Andersen chaired the Justice Select Committee [27] and, according to a single secondary source, also served as Deputy-Chairperson of the Governance and Administration Select Committee [28]. She has held the confirmed office of Minister of Police [43], with a single secondary source placing that appointment from 20 March 2023 [44]. According to single secondary sources, she has also held the portfolios of Minister for the Digital Economy and Communications [41], Minister for Seniors [38], Minister for Small Business [39], and Associate Minister for Treaty of Waitangi Negotiations [25].

Generated 16 Jun 2026 · model claude-sonnet-4-6
AI-generated biography. Assembled by an LLM from public sources (Wikipedia, parliament register, Beehive, news archives). Every claim is backed by a verbatim quote in one of the cited sources below and tagged confirmed, unverified, or disputed by corroboration. Use as a starting reference, not a final source — cross-check anything load-bearing.
7 confirmed 46 unverified 0 disputed
Verify the bio — expand the citation index 53 sourced claims

Education

Career

Political offices

Party affiliation

Civic roles & honours

  • [20]
    Civic role: Head Girl at Avonside Girl's High. unverified
  • [21]
    Civic role: vice president of the Labour Party (from 2015). unverified

Looked for, not found

  • No public record found of any formal honours or awards (e.g. Queen's/King's Honours) conferred on Ginny Andersen.
  • No publicly confirmed information about Ginny Andersen's pre-university schooling at Phillipstown School and Avonside Girls' High School could be corroborated from a tier-1 source with verbatim quotes (Wikipedia reference and KeyWiki both mention these but verbatim extraction failed).

The agent checked these topics across the allowed public sources but could not find verbatim-quotable evidence. Absence doesn't rule the fact out — it just means no journalist-accessible source covered it at run time.

Pecuniary interests

2025 register · as of 27 May 2026

As a sitting MP, this candidate files an annual Register of Pecuniary and Other Specified Interests. Items below are the most recent declarations from the Register.

Debts owed by you
Kiwibank Kiwibank – mortgage on family home
Real property
Family home (jointly owned) – Belmont, Lower Hutt, Wellington
Retirement schemes
Bank of New Zealand KiwiSaver Bank of New Zealand KiwiSaver
New Zealand Retirement Trust Parliamentary Service Superannuation Plan New Zealand Retirement Trust Parliamentary Service Superannuation Plan – AMP

Recent press

50 articles across 7 outlets
RNZ 21
Stuff 8
The Spinoff 7
NZ Herald 6
1News 4
Newsroom 2
Otago Daily Times 2