Labour party activism Boyack has been a member of the
Labour Party since 2005. having expressed an interest in doing so in 2015. She finished runner-up, but lowered Smith's majority by 3000 votes.
First term, 2020–2023 She was selected to stand in Nelson for Labour again in . In her first term as a Member of Parliament, Boyack served as deputy chair of the governance and administration committee and deputy chair of the petitions committee. She sang a hymn at the conclusion of her maiden statement on 10 February 2021. The bill proposed requiring public agencies to appoint plain language officers in a bid to make public facing government documentation more comprehensible. The bill was opposed by the opposition National Party, who attempted a filibuster, but passed into law in October 2022. Boyack also oversaw the passage of a private bill modernising the governance arrangements of the
Cawthron Institute.
Second term, 2023–present Official results for the
2023 New Zealand general election, as of 3 November 2023, showed Boyack retaining the Nelson seat by 29 votes over National's candidate
Blair Cameron. On 8 November, the National Party sought a judicial recount in the Nelson electorate. On 10 November, the Electoral Commission confirmed that Boyack had won Nelson by a margin of 26 votes, three votes fewer than the final vote results. In late November 2023, Boyack became spokesperson for the
Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC), arts, culture and heritage, and animal welfare in the
Shadow Cabinet of Chris Hipkins. In early March 2025, Boyack gained the oceans and fisheries portfolio during a shadow cabinet reshuffle. She retained the arts, culture and heritage and animal welfare portfolios but lost the ACC portfolio. ==References==