Start of career and election to parliament Sharma worked for
Phil Goff's campaign in the
2014 election. He did not win a seat; he received 31% of the electorate vote compared to the incumbent's 52%. Following his loss, Sharma practised as a
GP in Hamilton for two years. Sharma was the first MP to take the
Oath of Allegiance in
Sanskrit, after first completing it in
te reo Māori. Sharma was the first MP of Indian origin to represent an electorate for the Labour Party.
Allegations of bullying within Parliament On 11 August 2022, Sharma wrote an
opinion piece for
The New Zealand Herald newspaper in which he alleged widespread bullying within
Parliament. The piece included specific allegations aimed at
party whips, party leadership, and the
Parliamentary Service. The next day, he expanded on these allegations with a
Facebook post detailing specific grievances against Labour Whip
Duncan Webb, former Whip
Kieran McAnulty, and the office of
Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern. In the following days and weeks, Sharma continued to publish allegations, such as another Facebook post on 15 August, and a further post of 29 August, in which Sharma published a 4,700 word social media post detailing his complaints with the work performance of three former staff members and accused the Parliamentary Service of fabricating information about him. In October 2022,
The Spinoff claimed Sharma had presented little in the way of evidence to back his allegations of bullying and harassment.
Responses to allegations Government responses Parliamentary Service chief executive
Rafael Gonzalez-Montero disputed Sharma's allegations and defended his organisation's work on countering bullying within parliament. The Parliamentary Service rebutted one of Sharma's allegations that another Labour MP and a parliamentary staff member had misspent taxpayer money in August 2021. Gonzalez-Montero responded that the duo had travelled to the MP's electorate for the purposes of team-building, which he described as a normal procedure for MPs who were establishing a new team within their electorates. On 19 August,
Newshub reported that the
Chief Ombudsman Peter Boshier had sent a letter to Ardern querying Sharma's allegations that Labour MPs had been trained to circumvent the
Official Information Act 1982.
Support National Party MPs
Matt Doocey,
Chris Bishop, and
Chris Penk claimed that Sharma's allegations raised questions about alleged bullying and victimising within the Labour Party. Gonzalez-Montero, Webb, and Ardern confirmed that their offices were working with Sharma to resolve an employment dispute in his parliamentary office.
The New Zealand Herald reported that three of Sharma's staff members had resigned during his first year after raising concerns about him; which allegedly prompted the Parliamentary Service to suspend the hiring of new staff for Sharma's parliamentary office. In response to Sharma's Facebook post of 29 August, a former staff member accused Sharma of breaching confidentiality rules and bringing back past trauma.
Expulsion from Labour On 15 August, Ardern confirmed that the Labour Party
parliamentary caucus would be holding a special meeting that week to discuss Sharma's bullying allegations. That same day, Sharma also claimed that he was being silenced after Labour leaders ordered him to raise his concerns with party whips and leaders and to avoid speaking with the media. On the evening of 15 August, the Labour Party held a
Zoom meeting for all its MPs except Sharma, to discuss Sharma's future within the party. Sharma found out about this meeting after "accidentally" receiving a message with a photo of fellow Labour MP
Kelvin Davis on Zoom call. Prior to that, Sharma had agreed to attend a special caucus meeting on 16 August to discuss Sharma's bullying allegations. After learning about the evening meeting on 15 August, Sharma refused to attend the 16 August meeting and claimed that his fate had been "pre-determined." During the special caucus meeting held on 16 August, Labour MPs voted unanimously to suspend Sharma from the party caucus effective immediately until December 2022. While Sharma would remain the Labour MP for Hamilton West, he was excluded from caucus events. Ardern defended Sharma's suspension, claiming it was an appropriate response to what she described as his "repeated breaches of trust." Ardern also claimed that Sharma had rejected the party's offers of coaching, mentoring and temporary staff over the past 18 months. In return, Sharma had accused the Labour leadership of ignoring his concerns,
gaslighting him, and creating a cover-up culture. Sharma accused the Prime Minister of lying "every step of the way". In an interview with public broadcaster
Radio New Zealand on 17 August, Sharma claimed he had recorded an hour-long phone conversation with a senior Labour MP, who called him after the 15 August meeting to warn his fate was sealed and multiple times tell him the decision made by the Labour caucus on 16 August was pre-determined. Asked if he would stay in Parliament if he was expelled from the Labour caucus, Sharma admitted "I haven't thought this through to that". In mid August, Ardern indicated that Sharma would face a motion to expel him from the Labour Party caucus for breaching party protocol. However, she ruled out using the
Electoral (Integrity) Amendment Act 2018, colloquially known as the
waka-jumping act, to expel Sharma from Parliament. Ardern stated this was to avoid the "unnecessary burden" on taxpayers by triggering a by-election. Ardern also refused Sharma's appeal for an independent inquiry, claiming that his allegations were unfounded. Ardern also indicated that the Party would consider expelling him from the Labour Party. On 23 August, Ardern confirmed that the Labour caucus had voted to expel Sharma permanently from its caucus. She added that the caucus had also voted to refer the matter to the New Zealand Council of the Labour Party for them to consider any further disciplinary action. Being expelled from the Labour caucus meant that Sharma was an independent MP, still representing his electorate. On 24 August, during the election of the new
Speaker of the House Adrian Rurawhe, Sharma used
parliamentary privilege to accuse the outgoing Speaker
Trevor Mallard of ignoring his concerns about bullying within Labour and reporting his complaint to the Labour Whips' office. Sharma was halted during his speech by Rurawhe and told to sit down for going off topic. On 19 October 2022, party president
Claire Szabó confirmed Sharma had been expelled from the party and stated that the party had not considered invoking waka-jumping rules to remove him from Parliament. Szabó also confirmed an investigation had taken place into alleged misconduct by Sharma, which he had participated in, while also saying that Sharma had released the details of the investigation after ignoring a confidentiality requirement. On 20 October 2022, the New Zealand Council, Labour's governing body, expelled Sharma from the party with immediate effect. In a statement, party president Szabó said the council "took this decision because it found Gaurav Sharma had brought the party into disrepute", a breach of the party's constitution.
Resignation, by-election, and launch of the Momentum Party On 18 October 2022, Sharma announced on his
Facebook page that he had resigned from Parliament, and that he would contest the
by-election for Hamilton West that would result from this. Sharma also used the post to announce his intentions to start a new "centrist" political party. Sharma claimed that Labour planned to use the
waka-jumping legislation to force him out of Parliament six months before the
2023 New Zealand general election, and that this would mean a by-election could be avoided. Sharma also used the post to announce his intentions to start a new "centrist" political party. The by-election was held on 10 December 2022, with
writ day designated as 2 November. Sharma's campaign for re-election was financially supported by Roshan Nauhria, one of New Zealand's richest Indian businessmen and who was previously the leader of the
New Zealand People's Party. During the campaign period Sharma launched the New Zealand Momentum Party, claiming that most of his core campaign team had left Labour for Momentum. While the party wasn't registered, Sharma said that 800 people had an intention to join it. Sharma lost the Hamilton West by-election, which was won by the National Party candidate
Tama Potaka. Sharma came fourth place with 1,242 votes. == Later career ==