Michael Woodhouse


Michael Allan Woodhouse is a National member of the New Zealand Parliament.

Early years

Woodhouse was born and raised in South Dunedin, the fifth of nine children. He attended St Patrick's, St Edmund's and St Pauls High School, now Kavanagh College, which he left at the end of sixth form in 1982.
He worked for the National Bank of New Zealand in Dunedin and Wellington until 1987 when he embarked on a rugby sojourn to Scotland and England, playing for Dunfermline 1987/88 and Broughton Park in Manchester 1988/89. He then returned to Dunedin where he studied Commerce and Accounting at the University of Otago, which he graduated from in 1993.
He worked at Taylor McLachlan Accountants in Dunedin, Dunedin Hospital and ACC. In 2005 he earned a Masters of Health Administration at the University of New South Wales in Australia.
Prior to his political career, Woodhouse was the CEO of Mercy Hospital in Dunedin from 2001 to 2008.
Woodhouse was convicted for drink-driving when he was 21 years old.

Member of Parliament

Fifth National Government, 2008–2017

Woodhouse stood in Dunedin North in 2008 and, though he received 30.64% of the votes he was defeated by incumbent electorate Pete Hodgson who received 52.62% of the vote. He was still however elected to the New Zealand House of Representatives through National's party list. In the, Woodhouse reduced the majority from 7,155 in 2008 to 3,489 against David Clark. National also lost the party vote by 420 votes. Clark beat Woodhouse with an increased majority in the.
A member of the Health and Transport & Industrial Relations Select Committees in the 49th Parliament, Woodhouse was elected as the National Party's senior whip on 20 December 2011. He is the head of the Parliamentarians for Arthritis group and is active in the Parliamentary Sports Trust as a rugby player and referee.
In a reshuffle in January 2013, Woodhouse was made a minister outside cabinet and was given the Immigration, Veteran's Affairs and associate transport portfolios. During his time in Parliament, Woodhouse voted against the Marriage Amendment Bill, a bill allowing same-sex couples to marry in New Zealand. During the Fifth National Government, Woodhouse served in various portfolios including immigration, transport, veteran's affairs, land information, workplace relations and safety, police, and the Accident Compensation Corporation.
In August 2015, Michael Woodhouse caused controversy when he released a list of 57 high risk industries for his Health an Safety Reform Bill. This list was mocked by the Opposition because worm farming and mini golf were deemed "high risk", while dairy and cattle farming were not. Labour leader, Andrew Little, stated the new classifications were "overly complicated, ill thought out and rushed through to appease National Party backers, putting the lives of New Zealanders at risk". While Labour's spokesperson for Labour issues, Iain Lees-Galloway, said Woodhouse "can’t worm his way out of this. He will be forever ridiculed as the Minister who made killer worm farms safer but failed to protect people working in some of New Zealand's most dangerous industries".
During the 2017 general election, Michael Woodhouse was re-elected as a List MP on the National Party List. However, he failed to capture the Dunedin North electorate seat, which was held by Labour MP David Clark.

Sixth Labour Government, 2017–present

Following the formation of a Labour-led coalition government with the support of New Zealand First and the Green Party, National and its former support partner, the libertarian ACT New Zealand party, formed the opposition in the House of Representatives. Michael Woodhouse became Deputy Shadow Leader of the House and the National Party's spokesperson for health and immigration. He is also currently a member of the health and privileges select committees.
In early August 2018, Woodhouse in his capacity as National health spokesperson called for National Health Targets to be a legal requirement in response to the Labour Party's proposed Child Poverty legislation. In late August 2018, Woodhouse objected to United States whistleblower Chelsea Manning's proposed tour of New Zealand in early September 2018, arguing that she should be banned due to her lack of remorse over her role in leaking sensitive US military documents to WikiLeaks.
Since 25 March 2020, Woodhouse has been a member of the Epidemic Response Committee, a select committee that considers the government's response to the COVID-19 pandemic. On 17 June, Woodhouse claimed that a source had told him that two travelers, who tested positive for COVID-19, had made physical contact with others while traveling from Auckland to Wellington to attend a funeral. In response, the Ministry of Health confirmed that the two infected travelers had "five minutes" of limited contact with two friends during their journey.
On 10 July, Woodhouse admitted that he had received private patient information from former National Party President Michelle Boag in late June, which had led to Boag's resignation from the National Party and fellow National MP Hamish Walker being stripped of his portfolios. Woodhouse confirmed that he had deleted the emails, stating that it was inappropriate to have leaked them. Woodhouse was criticised by Health Minister Chris Hipkins, who alleged that he had been "sitting on information" related to the recent COVID-19 leak. Following a leadership election within the National Party that was held on 15 July 2020, Woodhouse was stripped of his health spokesperson portfolio by newly elected leader Judith Collins, who gave the role to Dr. Shane Reti.

Personal life

Woodhouse is an avid rugby fan, having played for Otago in his youth. He has a wife Amanda and three children.
An avid rugby follower, Woodhouse played age group rugby for Otago and South Island rep teams and premier rugby for Dunedin and Western Suburbs in Wellington. He also refereed 84 premier and approximately 20 representative colts and 'B' provincial matches. He also was a premier grade referee.