In April 2014, Kuriger was selected as National's candidate in
Taranaki-King Country to replace the retiring
Shane Ardern. Her maiden statement, given on 21 October 2014, was the second to be given in the
51st Parliament's
address in reply debate. Reelected at the
2017 New Zealand general election, she served as the National Party's
senior whip from 2018 to 2020. In March 2018 a member's bill in her name seeking to impose penalties on the parents of children before the
youth court was debated and lost. Briefly in 2020 she also the party's spokesperson for food safety, rural communities, and women, and chaired Parliament's primary production committee. she was appointed spokesperson for agriculture, energy and resources, and food safety. She chaired the governance and administration committee from 2020 to 2021. In October 2022 Kuriger resigned from her agriculture, biosecurity, and food safety portfolios due to mismanaging conflicts of interest with the
Ministry for Primary Industries (MPI) over the prosecution of her husband and son. In December 2022, hundreds of pages of emails between Kuriger and MPI, obtained by
Newsroom under the
Official Information Act, revealed a pattern of personal attacks on MPI officials in relation to animal mistreatment charges filed against her son Tony. MPI commissioned Mike Heron KC to review its conduct in the case. That review cleared the ministry of any wrongdoing and found the investigation into Tony Kuriger was not motivated by political purposes, despite the Kurigers' repeated private and public claims to the contrary. Kuriger refused to resign from Parliament over the incident. Following a January 2023 shadow cabinet reshuffle, Kuriger was allocated the conservation portfolio but was moved outside of the shadow cabinet with no ranking. National returned to government for the first time in six years at the
2023 New Zealand general election. Kuriger retained her electorate by a margin of 14,355 votes, defeating
Labour candidate
Angela Roberts, and was appointed
Deputy Speaker of the House of Representatives. ==References==