Biography
Ngoc-Lan Thi Pham is a New Zealand politician and ecologist. She was a regional councillor for Environment Canterbury for six years and was elected to Parliament as a Green in the 2023 New Zealand general election.
Source: WikipediaImpact this term
54th Parliament · since the 2023 general election
These are factual counts from the public record — not a score. MPs do different jobs: list and electorate MPs, ministers and backbenchers all contribute differently, and MPs first elected in 2023 have a shorter record. We show the facts so you can decide what counts as doing enough.
Policies they shape — and why
Bills they’ve worked on
Lan Pham doesn’t currently have a members’ bill in the ballot. Browse all bills before the House on the Bills tracker.
Voting record
Most votes in Parliament are party votes — MPs vote as a block with their party, so on the large majority of votes Lan Pham voted the same way as Green. The votes that reveal an MP’s own view are conscience (personal) votes, where MPs vote individually.
Lan Pham’s conscience votes and key divisions this term are being added from the official record (Hansard / parliamentary divisions).
Declared interests
What Lan Pham has declared in the official register — directorships, property, trusts, debts and gifts. Registers actual and potential conflicts of interest; it is not a measure of wealth.
2 Other companies and business entities Ngoc-Lan Pham Partnership – ownership of family home J. 7 ANNUAL RETURNS AS AT 31 JANUARY 2025 44 6 Real property Family home (owned by Ngoc-Lan Pham Partnership) – Wellington 7 Retirement schemes Pathfinder KiwiSaver 10 Debts owed by you Kiwibank – home loan Hon Tama
Register of Pecuniary Interests (parliament.nz) · as at 31 January 2025Taxpayer-funded expenses
Travel and accommodation paid by Parliamentary Service for 1 October – 31 December 2025. Ministers’ expenses are disclosed separately.
Roles & responsibilities
Details sourced from parliament.nz and the public record. Bills, written questions, speeches and voting records are being added from Parliament’s official register and Hansard. Photo: Naomi Madeiros, CC BY-SA 4.0 (source ).
