Background In August 2018,
Minister of Justice Andrew Little proposed that a conversion therapy ban could be considered as part of a reform to the
Human Rights Act 1993. After this plan was voted down by coalition partners
New Zealand First, the governing
Labour Party announced in October 2020 it would definitively ban the practise if
re-elected.
First reading On 30 July 2021,
Minister of Justice and Labour Member of Parliament (MP)
Kris Faafoi introduced the proposed Conversion Practices Prohibition Legislation Bill into the
New Zealand Parliament. On 5 August 2021, the Bill received its first reading in Parliament. The Labour,
Green,
ACT, and
Māori parties supported the bill, but the
National Party opposed it on the grounds that it lacked provisions protecting parents from prosecution. National had previously supported banning conversion therapy. In April 2021, party leader
Judith Collins had pledged National's support for the ban after consulting the party's youth wing Young Nats and googling conversion therapy. Supporters of the Bill including Faafoi, Green MP
Chlöe Swarbrick, Associate Health Minister Dr.
Ayesha Verrall, Labour MP
Marja Lubeck, Green MP
Elizabeth Kerekere, Labour MP
Glen Bennett, and Labour MP
Shanan Halbert described conversion therapy as
pseudoscientific and harmful towards the
LGBT community. Māori Party co-leader
Rawiri Waititi claimed that conversion therapy was associated with European colonisation and ideas about gender and sexuality that were alien to
Māori people. While supporting the goals of the legislation in addressing harm towards LGBTQI communities, ACT MP
Nicole McKee expressed concerns that the law would also penalise parents and religious communities. Opponents of the Bill including National's justice spokesperson
Simon Bridges,
Chris Penk, and
Barbara Kuriger supported the intentions of the legislation but expressed concerns about penalising parents and its allegedly vague language. Around 38,900 submissions were unique, with the remaining 68,100 being
form submissions. On 2 February, the Justice select committee released its report on the Conversion Practices Prohibition Legislation Bill. While the bill largely remained unchanged, the committee made recommendations which clarified the bill's wording and added examples of type of actions that constituted conversion therapy into the legislation. The committee's chair
Ginny Andersen also sought to allay the concerns of opponents that the bill would penalise parents for having conversations with their children about sexuality and gender. While the National Party abandoned its plans to bloc-vote on the bill and allow conscience voting, the ACT Party objected to the bill in its submission, claiming that parents could be prosecuted for not supporting puberty blockers. The Labour, Greens and Māori parties maintained their support for the legislation. The select committee also heard 837 oral submissions including 716 individuals and 121 organisations.
Third reading On 15 February, the Bill passed its third and final reading by a margin of 112 to eight votes. The Labour, Green, Act and Māori parties bloc voted for the bill, alongside 25 National MPs who exercised their conscience votes. Eight National MPs, Simon Bridges, Simeon Brown, Melissa Lee,
Todd McClay, Simon O'Connor,
Chris Penk, Michael Woodhouse and Shane Reti, voted against the bill, also exercising their conscience votes. While none of the Bill's opponents spoke during the final reading, several supporters gave speeches supporting the legislation. The bill's sponsor Faafoi argued that it did not criminalise religious expressions of faith and "open and respectful conversations." Fellow Labour MP
Kiri Allan shared about her experience with conversion therapy as a teenager. The Green Party's rainbow spokesperson
Elizabeth Kerekere stated that the bill recognised the "decades of trauma" experienced by rainbow communities as well as their "right to exist free from torture, coercion and suppression." ==Responses==