The House: The other MPs at Youth Parliament
VNP/Louis Collins
Despite being a non-sitting week, last week Parliament was brimming with political intrigue and drama due to Youth Parliament, which occurs once each Parliamentary term, and involves each and every real MP selecting a young person from their electorate to represent them at the event in which participants recreate Parliament.
Minister for Youth James Meager described the event as an opportunity for youth to "learn about effective advocacy and how they can play a role in the decision-making process in the country".
Some may dismiss Youth Parliament as a tokenistic charade for swotty debating students. After being a fly-on-the-wall for the two days, it is clear that the event's impact runs far deeper.
You can listen to The House's audio story from Youth Parliament at the link above.
Youth MPs experience a number of Parliamentary procedures. Among them, the General Debate probably makes for the best watching.
This isn't your typical secondary school speech competition about uniforms in schools or whether pineapple belongs on pizza. Instead, these speeches are often well-researched, compelling, and have a raw, unfiltered passion.
Tanvi Upreti, Youth MP for National's Tom Rutherford, decried the lack of civics education in New Zealand schools, which she said led to young people making uninformed decisions at the polling booth.
Photo:
VNP/Louis Collins
"Voting without understanding is not empowerment. It is a cause of silence. It is a manipulation. It is an illusion of our choice," Upreti said.
Photo:
VNP/Louis Collins
Although strictly speaking, Youth MPs are non-partisan, representing their community rather than a party, it was clear some of them shared similar concerns as their older counterparts.
One such example was Youth MP for Labour's Ginny Anderson, Tautalaleleia Sa'u. If you closed your eyes, you could have easily been listening in during a strong General Debate speech from any given sitting week.
Photo:
VNP/Louis Collins
"Tax cuts for landlords, tax cuts for tobacco companies. But who's paying for it? People like my parents. People living in garages, cars, and overcrowded homes. We are paying for it with our dignity. Cost of living? No, it's the cost of breath, cost of seeing tomorrow, cost of the future, cost of who's going to eat and who isn't. Mr Speaker, at what cost will rangatahi have to pay to live a simple life?"
Photo:
VNP/Louis Collins
At every Youth Parliament, there seems to be some sort of controversy. You may recall a hullabaloo about mask wearing during the 2022 event, and action for lowering the voting age.
This time, the contention was over what some participants perceived to be censorship of speeches by the government (through the Ministry for Youth Development).
Photo:
VNP/Louis Collins
A recent fixture of Youth Parliament is the Youth Press Gallery, a separate group of 16-24 year olds who get soundbites on the tiles and cover proceedings from the gallery.
"I definitely have enjoyed just seeing the behind-the-scenes, it's kind of humanised a lot of the MPs," Youth Press Gallery member Jonathan McCabe said.
Photo:
VNP/Louis Collins
It seemed it wasn't just the Youth MPs who had concerns around censorship. Youth journalists Reuben Smith and Aleksandra Bogdanova said, "[it's] felt like every story… that we have to publish, we have to send over to the ministry to have a look over. And though it's intended to help us, it does come with some consequences."
Photo:
VNP/Louis Collins
Smith and Bogdanava are students of the NZ Broadcasting School at the Ara Institute of Canterbury. Both said their brief taste of press gallery life had reinforced their interest in being a part of the fourth estate.
"It's a reminder of the democratic importance of free… journalism. Not something that is funded and sieved through the government."
Photo:
VNP/Louis Collins
When asked about the accusations of censorship, Minister for Youth James Meager called it a bit of a misunderstanding, adding that "all of the Youth MPs and the Youth Press Gallery were entitled to say what they felt like they needed to say. Part of our role and part of the Ministry's role in running this programme is to make sure that all the participants are safe in what they do and say. And look, they don't have the protections in the same way that politicians do in terms of privilege and in terms of protection from legal action. So just trying to support them and guide them and provide recommendations about what they might want to do, to amend their speeches here and there, but ultimately it's up to them as to what they say."
Photo:
VNP/Louis Collins
Youth MPs also had a go at scrutinising the government through a mock Question Time session, which Meager was involved in. Youth MPs weren't afraid to express dissatisfaction if they thought an answer wasn't up to scratch.
Photo:
VNP/Louis Collins
While there was probably just as much back and forth shouting in the chamber as there is in Parliament proper, several of the MPs I talked to noted the collegiality of their colleagues, telling me that arguments were almost always made in good spirit.
Youth MP for Catherine Wedd, Chris Proctor, said "the biggest thing I learnt is that politics isn't always like what you see in the media. I feel like sitting in the house. We felt a lot more unified than what it could look like from the outside. I think everyone's in there for the right reasons, representing their community."
*RNZ's The House, with insights into Parliament, legislation and issues, is made with funding from Parliament's Office of the Clerk. Enjoy our articles or podcast at RNZ.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

RNZ News
13 hours ago
- RNZ News
ACT sets out plan to party faithful: "Keep the government and make it better"
ACT is holding their annual rally in Auckland on Sunday. Shown: ACT leader David Seymour at the 2023 party rally. Photo: RNZ / Mohammad Alafeshat ACT has unveiled its pitch to lure a new supermarket player into New Zealand through a new fast-track approval process. It's part of the party's bid to focus on "problem solving" rather than "finger-pointing" as it looks toward the next election, to "keep the government" and make it "better". Leader David Seymour made the announcement at the party's annual rally on Sunday, in Auckland, where it considered its half-time "report card" of its performance in government . Seymour outlined the party's wins through the past year and a half - including in efforts on law and order and reducing co-governance - while signalling to the campaign ahead and the voters he wanted to claim. A key focus of Seymour's speech were the voters who he said had been treated as a "scapegoat" by the previous government. He suggested Labour chose landlords as a scapegoat for the issue of high rents. He said Labour did this because of "politics." "There are three million voters and only 120,000 are landlords so there's 23 other voters per landlord. They say the most important skill in politics is the ability to count." Along with landlords, Seymour said firearm owners, farmers and employers were affected by policies Labour put in place, as well as groups of people he said Labour had left out in the cold. "Blaming someone might feel good. We think that building something feels better," he said. "Whether you rent or own, farm or teach, build or tend, your future depends on solving the same problems, not blaming different people." His coalition partners weren't left unscathed tough, as he pointed to efforts to target big corporations as a way of making things easier for New Zealand, and targeting the cost of living. "You can understand people wanting to go after the banks or the supermarkets or the power companies. "It would be the easiest thing in the world for me to give a speech saying they're crooked and need to be punished somehow. "They should be taxed somehow, have their businesses broken up, or be watched over by even toothier watchdogs. It's the curse of zero sum thinking." His solution to the "biggest challenge we face" - the cost of living - was to loosen up what Seymour called "outdated planning and consenting rules", which were the biggest barriers to international supermarket players setting up shop in the country. "With the cost of living, the solution is not regulation but competition. Business should fear competition, not their own government." A new ACT party proposal - rather than government policy - would introduce a fast-track approval process that would streamline rezoning, consenting and investment approvals to build new supermarkets at scale. Seymour said this would allow new entrants or smaller grocers to get approval within months, not years. There was no mention in the speech of a specific player who had shown interest in setting up in New Zealand, but Seymour said he hoped it would bring a "serious extra chain to retail in New Zealand.' "Even if it doesn't, just the possibility of a new competitor can help keep competitive pressure on the incumbents," he said. "If it doesn't work, we'll know that either our market is more competitive than we thought, or we have some other problem." Ultimately, he told the audience, "if you're looking for finger pointing, don't look here. We are interested in problem solving." "If you want to find a scapegoat, you can, but it still won't work. We tried it with landlords, we tried it with oil and gas, we tried it with farmers, employers, and licensed firearm owners. "Every time government goes after a group in society, the problem gets worse." As part of his speech he also acknowledged the failure of the Treaty Principles Bill to pass into law. "Our partners abandoned us defining the Treaty Principles, so we lost the vote. "That's a shame, but there's something more important than winning the vote. We won the argument." It's a key policy that differentiates ACT from its coalition partners, and the party has indicated it will continue to try and pass it in some form. "It is now a matter of time before the Treaty Principles Bill or something like it passes," Seymour told the gathering. At the half-way mark of this term in government, Seymour said the party's focus from here would be "campaigning to keep the government and keep making it better." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero, a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
14 hours ago
- RNZ News
Peeni Henare to contest Tāmaki Makaurau by-election for Labour
Labour MP Peeni Henare. Photo: RNZ / Samuel Rillstone Labour MP Peeni Henare has been confirmed as his party's candidate for the Tamaki Makaurau by-election. The by-election was sparked by the death of Te Pati Maori MP Takutai Moana Natasha Kemp last month. Henare previously held the Tāmaki Makaurau seat, before being beaten by Kemp in the 2023 election by a majority of just four votes over Henare in 2023, with a recount widening the margin. Henare had held the seat since 2014. "I am humbled and honoured to be selected to represent Labour in the upcoming by-election," Henare said. He said jobs, access to quality and affordable health services, affordable housing and relief from the rising cost of living were a top priority. "Tāmaki Makaurau is where I was born and is my home. I know the challenges that many whānau are facing. The cost of living is putting significant pressure on whānau just to put kai on the table," Henare said. "My focus is clear. To fight for real solutions so our people can flourish. "This means better paying jobs, making sure that when whānau are sick, they don't need to choose between kai and seeing the doctor and it means getting more whānau into warm dry and safe homes." Labour leader Chris Hipkins said Henare is the leader Tāmaki Makaurau needs. "He has the experience and track record to deliver real solutions for working families, rangatahi, kaumātua and our most vulnerable whānau," Hipkins said. Former Newshub broadcaster Oriini Kaipara has been chosen to contest the Tāmaki Makaurau by-election for Te Pāti Māori. Prime Minister Christopher Luxon is yet to announce the date for a by-election. However, the Speaker of the House published the notice of vacancy in the Gazette on Wednesday, meaning the Governor-General will issue a writ within 21 days of 9 July, instructing the Chief Electoral Officer to conduct the by-election. Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

RNZ News
15 hours ago
- RNZ News
NZ's new AI strategy is long on 'economic opportunity' but short on managing ethical and social risk
By By Andrew Lensen* of Photo: Supplied/Callaghan Innovation The government's newly unveiled National AI Strategy is all about what its title said: "Investing with Confidence". It tells businesses that Aotearoa New Zealand is open for AI use, and that our "light touch" approach won't get in their way. The question now is whether the claims made for AI by Minister of Science, Innovation and Technology Shane Reti - that it will help boost productivity and enable the economy to grow by billions of dollars - can be justified. Generative AI - the kind powering ChatGPT, CoPilot, and Google's video generator Veo 3 - is certainly earning money. In its latest funding round in April, OpenAI was valued at US$300 billion . Nvidia, which makes the hardware that powers AI technology, just became the first publicly traded company to surpass a $4 trillion market valuation . It'd be great if New Zealand could get a slice of that pie. New Zealand doesn't have the capacity to build new generative AI systems, however. That takes tens of thousands of NVIDIA's chips, costing many millions of dollars that only big tech companies or large nation states can afford. What New Zealand can do is build new systems and services around these models, either by fine-tuning them or using them as part of a bigger software system or service. The government isn't offering any new money to help companies do this. Its AI strategy is about reducing barriers, providing regulatory guidance, building capacity, and ensuring adaptation happens responsibly. But there aren't many barriers to begin with. The regulatory guidance contained in the strategy essentially said "we won't regulate". Existing laws are said to be "technology-neutral" and therefore sufficient. As for building capacity, the country's tertiary sector is more under-funded than ever, with universities cutting courses and staff. Humanities research into AI ethics is also ineligible for government funding as it doesn't contribute to economic growth. The issue of responsible adoption is perhaps of most concern. The 42-page " Responsible AI Guidance for Businesses " document, released alongside the strategy, contains useful material on issues such as detecting bias, measuring model accuracy, and human oversight. But it is just that - guidance - and entirely voluntary. This puts New Zealand among the most relaxed nations when it comes to AI regulation, along with Japan and Singapore . At the other end is the European Union, which enacted its comprehensive AI Act in 2024, and has stood fast against lobbying to delay legislative rollout. The relaxed approach is interesting in light of New Zealand being ranked third-to-last out of 47 countries in a recent survey of trust in AI . In another survey from last year, 66 percent of New Zealanders reported being nervous about the impacts of AI . Some of the nervousness can be explained by AI being a new technology with well documented examples of inappropriate use, intentional or not. Deepfakes as a form of cyberbullying have become a major concern. Even the ACT Party, not generally in favour of more regulation, wants to criminalise the creation and sharing of non-consensual, sexually explicit deepfakes. Generative image, video, and music creation is reducing the demand for creative workers, even though it is their very work that was used to train the AI models. But there are other, more subtle issues, too. AI systems learn from data. If that data is biased, then those systems will learn to be biased, too. New Zealanders are right to be anxious about the prospect of private sector companies denying them jobs, entry to supermarkets , or a bank loan because of something in their pasts. Because modern deep learning models are so complex and impenetrable, it can be impossible to determine how an AI system made a decision. And what of the potential for AI to be used online to mislead voters and discredit the democratic process, as the New York Times has reported, may have occurred already in at least 50 cases. The strategy is essentially silent on all of these issues. It also doesn't mention Te Tiriti o Waitangi/Treaty of Waitangi. Even Google's AI summary tells me this is the nation's founding document, laying the groundwork for Māori and the Crown to coexist. AI, like any data-driven system, has the potential to disproportionately disadvantage Māori if it involves systems from overseas designed (and trained) for other populations. Allowing these systems to be imported and deployed in Aotearoa New Zealand in sensitive applications - healthcare or justice, for example - without any regulation or oversight risks worsening inequalities even further. What's the alternative? The EU offers some useful answers. It has taken the approach of categorising AI uses based on risk : This feels like a mature approach New Zealand might emulate. It wouldn't stymie productivity much - unless companies were doing something risky. In which case, the 66 percent of New Zealanders who are nervous about AI might well agree it's worth slowing down and getting it right. Andrew Lensen is a Senior Lecturer in Artificial Intelligence at Te Herenga Waka - Victoria University of Wellington -This story was originally published on The Conversation.