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Elections / 2026 / Remutaka / Chris Hipkins
Portrait of Chris Hipkins
Photo via Wikipedia
2026 general election Sitting MP
Defending Remutaka

Chris Hipkins

Kind
Electorate & list
Source
elections-wikipedia
As of
9 Jun 2026

Background

Research run #28 · 26 Apr 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.

Rt Hon Chris Hipkins is a New Zealand politician affiliated with the Labour Party [45] who currently serves as Leader of the Opposition [26].

Hipkins attended Hutt Valley Memorial College, where he served as head boy in 1996 [16][18]. He went on to study at Victoria University of Wellington [20], where, according to a single reputable secondary source, he was active as a student protest organiser [13] and a student executive member [12]. He is reported to have served as president of the Victoria University of Wellington Students' Association (VUWSA) from around 2000 [17][40].

Before entering Parliament, Hipkins held a number of advisory and industry roles. According to a single reputable secondary source, he worked as an adviser in the offices of education ministers Trevor Mallard [5] and Steve Maharey [4], and also as an adviser in the office of Prime Minister Helen Clark [6]. He is also reported to have been a policy adviser at the Industry Training Federation [8], a training manager in the oil and gas industry in Taranaki [14], and a worker in the oil and gas industry more broadly [15].

Hipkins was first elected as the Labour Member of Parliament for Rimutaka in 2008 [29]. Sources differ on the electorate name, with some references listing it as Remutaka from 2020 [28]. According to a single reputable secondary source, he served as Labour spokesperson for internal affairs from 2008 [2], and later as Labour spokesperson for state services and education from 2011 [3]. He is reported to have served as Labour Party chief whip from 2011 [1] and as shadow leader of the House from 2014 [10].

Following the 2017 election, Hipkins held the office of Leader of the House, though sources disagree on the precise period of this role [23]. He served as Minister of Education, with sources placing the start of this role in 2017 across multiple accounts [35], and as Minister of State Services [38] and Minister for the Public Service [34]. He held the role of Minister for COVID-19 Response [31][39], and served as Minister of Health [36] and Minister of Police [37], though sources disagree on the precise periods for each of these portfolios. He also held the office of Minister for National Security and Intelligence [32] and Minister Responsible for Ministerial Services [30].

Sources differ on the precise start date of his tenure as Prime Minister of New Zealand, with some placing it from 25 January 2023 [42] and others from January 2023 more broadly [9][41]. He assumed the leadership of the New Zealand Labour Party on 22 January 2023 [25], with broader references also noting this transition in January 2023 [22][24]. Following the October 2023 general election, he became Leader of the Opposition, with one source placing this from 27 October 2023 [26].

Generated 27 Apr 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.
9 confirmed 39 unverified 4 disputed
Verify the bio — expand the citation index 52 sourced claims

Education

Career

  • [1]
    Prior career: Labour Party chief whip (from 2011). unverified
  • [2]
    Prior career: Labour spokesperson for internal affairs (from 2008). unverified
  • [3]
    Prior career: Labour spokesperson for state services and education (from 2011). unverified
  • [4]
    Prior career: adviser in the office of education minister Steve Maharey. unverified
  • [5]
    Prior career: adviser in the office of education minister Trevor Mallard. unverified
  • [6]
    Prior career: adviser in the office of prime minister Helen Clark. unverified
  • [7]
    Prior career: genuine Hutt boy. unverified
  • [8]
    Prior career: policy adviser at the Industry Training Federation. unverified
  • [9]
    Prior career: prime minister of New Zealand (from January 2023). unverified
  • [10]
    Prior career: shadow leader of the House (from 2014). unverified
  • [11]
    Prior career: staff member working for Trevor Mallard. unverified
  • [12]
    Prior career: student executive member at Victoria University. unverified
  • [13]
    Prior career: student protest organiser. unverified
  • [14]
    Prior career: training manager in the oil and gas industry in Taranaki. unverified
  • [15]
    Prior career: worker in the oil and gas industry. unverified

Political offices

Party affiliation

Civic roles & honours

Looked for, not found

  • No specific public record found of the precise date Chris Hipkins was appointed to the Privy Council (which confers the "Rt Hon" title), though the DPMC website confirms use of the title from at least January 2023.

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.

Beneficial interests in, and trusteeships of, trusts
C.J Hipkins Family Trust C.J Hipkins Family Trust (trustee and beneficiary)
Debts owed by you
Westpac Bank Westpac Bank – mortgages
Real property
Family home – Upper Hutt, Wellington
Residential property (owned by superannuation trust) – Raumati South, Paraparaumu
Retirement schemes
AMP KiwiSaver AMP KiwiSaver
AMP State Sector Retirement Savings Scheme AMP State Sector Retirement Savings Scheme
Forest Road Superannuation Trust Forest Road Superannuation Trust

Companies Office links

as of 27 May 2026

Directorships, shareholdings, and trusteeships filed against this person in the Companies Office register.

Trusteeships

Recent press

50 articles across 7 outlets
RNZ 19
Stuff 10
Otago Daily Times 8
1News 7
Newsroom 3
NZ Herald 2
The Spinoff 1