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Portrait of Judith Collins
Photo via Wikipedia
MP · #19

Judith Collins

Papakura · New Zealand National Party
Pecuniary interests
25 items
Directorships
6 declared
Recent meetings
0 logged

Bg Background Methodology →

Research run #60 · 5 May 2026
Every claim below links to its source. Click any footnote [1] in the text, or expand the citation index after the bio, to see the verbatim quote and the page it came from.

Judith Collins is a New Zealand National Party politician [71] who has held a wide range of ministerial and parliamentary roles over her career in public life.

Collins attended Matamata College for her secondary education [14] and went on to study at the University of Auckland [15]. According to a single reputable secondary source, she also studied at Massey University [13] and the University of Canterbury [16], and holds a Bachelor of Laws [11]. She is confirmed as a qualified lawyer [4], and according to a single reputable secondary source she began practising as a solicitor specialising in employment, property, commercial and tax law from 1981 [5]. She served as President of the Auckland District Law Society [7] and Vice-President of the New Zealand Law Society [8]. According to a single reputable secondary source, she owned a law firm from 1990 [3].

Collins entered Parliament as Member of Parliament for Clevedon in 2002 [40]. She later represented the electorate of Papakura, according to a single reputable secondary source, from 2008 [41]. She is affiliated with the National Party [71].

Following the 2008 election, Collins was appointed Minister of Police [60] and Minister of Corrections [57], with a single reputable secondary source placing both appointments from 19 November 2008 [17][24]. She subsequently served as Minister of Justice from 12 December 2011, according to a single reputable secondary source [27]. According to a single reputable secondary source, she also held the portfolios of Minister of Energy and Resources and Minister of Revenue from 20 December 2016 [19][23].

According to a single reputable secondary source, Collins became the 14th Leader of the National Party on 14 July 2020 [18], also serving as Leader of the Opposition during that period [36]. She held the party leadership until the National Party returned to government.

From 27 November 2023, Collins holds the confirmed portfolio of Minister for Space [54], as well as, according to single reputable secondary sources, Minister of Defence [26], Minister of Science, Innovation and Technology [22], and Minister for Digitising Government [25]. She is also noted as Minister Responsible for the GCSB [43] and NZSIS [45], and as Lead Coordination Minister for the Government's Response to the Royal Commission's Report into the Terrorist Attack on the Christchurch Mosques [32], all according to single reputable secondary sources. From 24 January 2025, she has held the role of Minister for the Public Service, according to a single reputable secondary source [21].

Outside of Parliament, Collins has served as a company director [2] and, according to a single reputable secondary source, as a director of Housing New Zealand [10]. She also served as President of the Auckland District Law Society [7] and Vice-President of the New Zealand Law Society [8]. According to a single reputable secondary source, she attended Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government in 2013 [12] and has held an adjunct professorship at Western Sydney University's law school from October 2024 [1]. According to a single reputable secondary source, she is a member of the Fulbright New Zealand Alumni Association [9]. She has been awarded the Ex-Vietnam Services Association Pin and Badge [68].

Generated 5 May 2026 · model claude-sonnet-4-6
AI-generated biography. Assembled by an LLM from public sources (Wikipedia, Hansard, Beehive, Parliament register, news archives). Every claim is backed by a verbatim quote in one of the cited sources below and tagged confirmed, unverified, or disputed based on corroboration. Use as a starting reference, not a final source — cross-check anything load-bearing.
13 confirmed 59 unverified 0 disputed
Verify the bio — expand the citation index 72 sourced claims

Education

Career

Political offices

Party affiliation

Civic roles & honours

Looked for, not found

  • Specific dates for Judith Collins' role as President of the Auckland District Law Society and Vice-President of the New Zealand Law Society — multiple sources confirm the roles but none provide precise start/end years in fetchable content.
  • Specific date of Judith Collins' King's Counsel appointment — 1News article confirmed it was December 2023 but the verbatim quote extractor rejected the honour_awarded claim from that page.

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

03 Pecuniary interests (2025) Methodology →

as of 2026-05-27 02:17
Beneficial interests in, and trusteeships of, trusts
Barbara Collins Family Trust (trustee) — Barbara Collins Family Trust (Trustee)
Edith Moorman Trust (trustee) — Edith Moorman Trust (Trustee)
James Resettlement Trust (trustee and beneficiary) — James Resettlement Trust (Trustee)
Judith Collins Family Trust (trustee and beneficiary) — Judith Collins Family Trust (Trustee)
Schoeller Family Trust (trustee) — Schoeller Family Trust (Trustee)
Sigmund Trust (trustee and beneficiary) — Sigmund Trust (Trustee)
Debts owed by you
ASB Bank – mortgage — ASB Bank
Debts owed to you
Holly Superannuation Scheme – on demand* — Holly Superannuation Scheme
Gifts
Chairman's Lounge pass – Qantas — Qantas
Eden Park corporate tickets (rugby) – Eden Park Trust Board — Eden Park Trust Board
Helicopter return flight – Te Arai Golf resort — Te Arai Golf resort
Helicopter return flight – Volta Aviation — Volta Aviation
Mount Smart corporate tickets – One NZ Warriors — One NZ Warriors
Sky Stadium corporate tickets (rugby) – US Embassy — US Embassy
Space Symposium – Space Foundation — Space Foundation
Tennis corporate ticket – Kiely Thompson Caisley, Lawyers — Kiely Thompson Caisley, Lawyers
Tennis corporate tickets – ASB Bank — ASB Bank
Tennis corporate tickets – Auckland Tennis — Auckland Tennis
Tennis corporate tickets – One NZ — One NZ
Other companies and business entities
CDL Hotels Limited – hotel operator — CDL Hotels Limited
Payment for activities
Book royalties – Public Lending Right — Public Lending Right
Real property
Commercial and residential property (owned by superannuation scheme) – Wellington
Family home (owned by trusts) – Auckland
Residential property (owned by superannuation scheme) – Nelson
Retirement schemes
Holly Superannuation Scheme — Holly Superannuation Scheme

04 Directorships Methodology →

as of 2026-05-27 02:17
None recorded.

06 Trusteeships & beneficial trust interests

08 Recent meetings (as minister) Methodology →

No meetings recorded.

12 In the news Methodology →

50 articles

Coverage from RNZ, Stuff, NZ Herald, ODT, 1News, Newsroom and The Spinoff that mentions this person. Click any source to expand. Article body markdown is captured separately and used for AI summarisation downstream.

The Spinoff 22
NZ Herald 14
RNZ 6
Stuff 3
Newsroom 2
1News 2
Otago Daily Times 1

12.5 Heard on radio

2 segments

Verbatim segments from podcasts and radio where this person was the speaker, attributed via the voice-reference library. Click play to stream the original audio from the publisher, pre-seeked to the moment the segment starts. Transcriptions are automated and attributions are manually reviewed, but cannot be guaranteed to be absolutely accurate — the seek point or speaker label may occasionally drift; the linked episode is the source of truth.

  • Oh, massive, massive, massive. So, Mike, I know that I couldn't have done what I've done in the style I have if I didn't know I always had a career to go to if this didn't work out. And and I think that's made a huge difference. So, you know, 21 years in law and business and governance before I went in meant that when I became a minister, I treated it as I had as a chairman of a board. So I'd been a chairman of a board before a couple of times, so I knew what to do, and that's the closest thing to it.
  • No, I I don't think it has gone down. I think it's just a different sort of brain power and different experiences. But there's some very intelligent people in Parliament and some very good hardworking people. And when I um you know, I was talking to some of them yesterday afternoon after my speech. Look, they they try their best. I don't know of people who go to Parliament just to think it's some sort of jolly. I think they they almost always believe that they're going to make a positive difference. And even if I might think that their politics are somewhat diluted, um, and that they are wrong on things. I I don't doubt their sincerity.

13 Commentary topics Methodology →

6 topics · 12 weeks

Topics where op-eds, blogs and press releases have mentioned this person, week-by-week. Each row links through to the topic detail in the discourse lens.

14 Press topics Methodology →

6 topics · 12 weeks

Topics where major news outlets have reported on this person. Each row links through to the topic detail in the press lens. Compare to the discourse rows above to see where reporting and commentary converge or diverge.

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