Inclusive Greens

Inclusive Greens: Who we are

Haere mai, welcome to the Inclusive Greens. We are the Green Party's disability network, led by and for everyone within the Green Party who self-identifies as disabled or Deaf, including people living with chronic illness or mental illness or who are neurodivergent

You can read the Green Party's Disability Policy here
You can find us on Facebook here
You can find us on Twitter here

Participating in the Network

We hold full Network meetings every two to three months over Zoom. We will often have updates and time for questions with an MP at meetings. Meetings are NZSL-interpreted and we strive to ensure they are accessible and trusting spaces for us to progress our mahi.

We communicate both via email (through the Green members website) and through a Facebook group. The best place for joining in the discussions outside of meetings is the Facebook group.

All Network members must be current members of the Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand. You can join the Green Party here

If you wish to join The Inclusive Greens, we ask that you carefully read and agree to our kaupapa statement below first.
Then request to join by filling out our join form here.


Whānau and allies closely connected to the disability community are welcome to request membership.   

For any other inquiries, please write to [email protected]

Inclusive Greens Kaupapa

The Inclusive Greens aim to be a safe place for us as disabled people to share our perspectives or experiences on any aspect of Green Party participation, policy or politics that connects to disability, access or inclusion. This is our priority. We honour our members' intersecting identities. 

Through our leadership, we want to constructively work with members in all areas of the Party to deeply understand and uphold disability rights and strive for full accessibility and inclusion. Our work is founded on the Green Party's charter and values especially honouring Te Tiriti o Waitangi, the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, and our own lived experience. Together, members of our Network form a community with the power to drive political change.

We challenge ableist policies, behaviours and attitudes, including those we've been taught to hold ourselves. We also recognise and challenge racism, xenophobia, classism, homophobia, transphobia, and other forms of harmful thinking. These engrained forms of thinking hurt us as individuals and as a group or collective. Any member not respecting this will first be given constructive feedback by a member of the Inclusive Greens committee and an opportunity to change, but if they persist, then they will be removed from the Network.

Inclusive Greens: History

The Inclusive Greens was founded in the mid 2000s by a small group of disabled Party members who realised that they, and/or family and friends, were finding it difficult to participate within the Party.  At the time many key parts of the Party  did not recognise  the importance of enabling accessibility and as a result disabled members were struggling to have their voice heard on a range of issues. 

Founding members of the Inclusive Greens were keen to change attitudes and policies  to enable full participation within the party for disabled members. Initially the group kept in touch at Party AGM’s and Policy conferences, and then through a mailing list established in 2005. In 2007, a working group led by Mojo Mathers developed and presented to the AGM a remit that commited the Party to move all offices around the country to physically accessible premises. This remit provoked intense debate across the party around the need for such a step as many members were attached to the old inaccessible offices. Eventually the working group secured the support of the party executive which opened the way for the remit to be passed at the 2007 AGM by consensus. Within two years all Green Party offices around the country, including the National office in Wellington, were shifted to accessible premises, a significant undertaking. Following this work, Mojo would go on to become NZ’s first Deaf MP in 2011 and was the Green Party disability spokesperson from 2011-2017. 

The Network grew steadily over the years, setting up a facebook group in 2016. In 2019, Inclusive Greens member Áine Kelly-Costello led the work to develop and present another AGM remit that secured the Inclusive Greens an official representative on the Party Executive, with the mandate to ensure that issues around accessibility and inclusion are kept front of mind for all party initiatives. 

In 2020, the Election Access Fund bill, originally drafted by Mojo Mathers in 2017 and championed by Green MP Chloe Swarbrick, was passed into law with unanimous support from all political parties. This fund, which covers disability related costs of standing as a candidate, will be in place for the 2023 General Election. The Inclusive Greens are keen to support aspiring disabled candidates to stand for election at both local body and general elections.

Contacting Inclusive Greens

You can get in touch with the Inclusive Greens network by emailing [email protected]