Weenink was born on 8 November 1978 at Holmdale, the maternity hospital in Blenheim. Her parents were Ross and Joan Weenink.[1][2] She grew up in Canvastown.[3] She is married to oncologist Matthew Strother; the couple share a blended family of five children.[4]
Weenink became involved in medical advocacy in 2019, and was the deputy chair of the New Zealand Medical Association (NZMA) and chair of the NZMA's General Practitioners Council. She had previously been a member of the Labour Party and had campaigned alongside Duncan Webb in Christchurch Central in 2017, but resigned in order to be more involved with the NZMA. After the NZMA was disestablished in 2022, she joined the National Party.[6]
Weenink had previously been a member of the Labour Party and had campaigned alongside Duncan Webb in Christchurch Central in 2017, but resigned in order to be more involved with the NZMA. After the NZMA was disestablished in 2022, she joined the National Party.[6] She sought the National Party nomination for Ilam for the 2023 general election, but was unsuccessful. [4]
She was announced as National's candidate for Banks Peninsula in March 2023[6] and was also ranked 40th on the National Party. According to final results, Weenink won the electorate with an 396-vote lead over incumbent Tracey McLellan,[7] flipping the seat to National for the first time in over two decades (the electorate was last won by National in the 1996 election).[8]
In December 2023, it was revealed that Weenink disagreed with her party’s position on smoke-free legislation. Newshub uncovered previous Facebook comments from Weenink in April 2021 on the Facebook page of Labour Party MP Duncan Webb[9][10] in which she stated her belief that "The nicotine level idea is a good one." in relation to the Labour governments smoke-free plans and legislation. She went on to refuse to provide comment on this stating that she now had a role as a backbench MP and it was not appropriate for her to comment.[citation needed]
References
^"Births". The Press. 14 November 1978. p. 37. Retrieved 19 October 2023.