The Post

More incidents involving Green MP claimed

- Kelly Dennett

A Wellington councillor has described two “completely inappropri­ate” encounters with Julie Anne Genter in her former capacity as associate transport minister, including one where he says she tried to exert political pressure on him.

Simon Woolf, formerly a Wellington city councillor, now with the Greater Wellington Regional Council, said he was speaking publicly about the incidents, which occurred in a short time frame in 2019, after extraordin­ary scenes emerged this week of the Green MP striding across the House during a transport debate to shout at National’s Matt Doocey.

Several complaints were made to Speaker Gerry Brownlee about Genter’s behaviour, and across the political divide her actions were deemed inappropri­ate and intimidato­ry. Within the Green Party a disciplina­ry process is under way.

On Thursday, a Wellington florist told The Post Genter had “bullied” her when the pair had a disagreeme­nt about cycleways being built in the area. Laura Newcombe, of Four Seasons Florist, said during the heated discussion Genter pulled out her phone and focused it on her face, which Newcombe said she found intimidati­ng.

The Green Party said it accepted Newcombe’s version of events. Genter was not in Parliament on Thursday and was said to be working from home. She did not respond to requests for comment. “I think she’s gone too far,” Woolf told The Post. “If you don’t put a stop to it, it [won’t] be the last ... Respect, and the way that Parliament and parliament­arians treat each other, is really important. If an MP handles themselves the way she did the other night, it isn’t OK.”

Woolf alleged an incident in 2019 where he was photograph­ing an event, in a personal business capacity, outside Parliament. Genter was attending as associate transport minister. Just a few months earlier, Lets Get Wellington Moving had been launched, sparking heated debate about cycleways and mass rapid transit.

Woolf said Genter “came right up to my face and complained bitterly about the slow progress with the city council and the cycleway implementa­tion. I had to tell her three times that I wasn’t there as a councillor, I had two cameras around my neck, and that I was there as a photograph­er. “There was a sense, if I can put it in context, I felt that she was coming from a heavy-handed perspectiv­e where she could influence me.”

He further clarified: “She was looking for me to support the speed-up of Thorndon Quay and Golden Mile. She knew I had reservatio­ns over those two areas [and] she was trying to get more involved in the decision making, which she could have done in another way. It was inappropri­ate.”

Woolf said he instructed Genter to take up her concerns through proper channels, including with his colleague, fellow councillor Sarah Free, who was handling cycleway implementa­tion. He said he gave Free a heads up that she could expect a call. Free said she didn’t remember the discussion.

Not long afterwards, at the Women of Influence Awards in October 2019, which Woolf was attending to support his mother, he said Genter again got “right in my face”, this time with several high-profile officials and individual­s watching, “and started shaking her finger at me in a very animated way”. He said he took Genter to the side, where she “berated me for five minutes” about comments he had made to media.

At that time, councillor­s, including Woolf, reported that Genter had threatened to resign if the Greens’ transport demands weren’t met. That was denied by Genter.

“Again, I said to her, this is not the right place or the right time; this is an awards ceremony,” said Woolf, who said he walked away. “It was completely inappropri­ate, unexpected and unprofessi­onal.”

He added: “Julie Anne is really passionate, and she loses control sometimes. It’s not that she doesn’t have a good heart for what she’s doing, it’s just that she needs to temper how she deals with people ...There’s a bit of entitlemen­t involved as well, because of her position, and that Julie Anne regards herself as an expert in certain areas, and particular­ly transport. “But this situation, both in Parliament, and with the florist, is completely unprofessi­onal and inappropri­ate and needs to be resolved ... she should certainly take some time off.”

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Julie Anne Genter

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