Background
Woods was born and grew up in Wigram, Christchurch.
Woods was born and grew up in Wigram, Christchurch.
She attended high school at Catholic Cathedral College and has a Doctor of Philosophy in history obtained at the University of Canterbury.
Woods was a business manager for Crop & Food Research (2005-2008) and its successor organisation Plant and Food Research (2008), based at Lincoln. She contested the Christchurch Central electorate in the 2005 general election and came fourth, receiving 1077 votes (32% of the electorate votes). She was placed fourth on the Progressive party list.
Woods joined the Labour Party in 2007.
In the same year, she contested the Christchurch mayoralty for the centre-left Christchurch 2021 group, receiving 32,821 votes and coming second against Bob Parker (47,033 votes), but beating Jo Giles (14,454 votes) in the election contested by ten candidates. She did not contest the 2008 general election or the 2010 mayoral election.
Woods was selected as the Labour Party candidate for the 2011 election in the Wigram electorate. She succeeded Jim Anderton, who had announced that he would retire either after winning the Christchurch mayoralty (he was unsuccessful) or at the end of the term of the 49th Parliament in November 2011.
Until the 2010 Canterbury earthquake, Anderton was leading in the opinion polls, and winning the mayoralty would have caused a by-election in the Wigram electorate.
The earthquake resulted in a mood swing in Christchurch, and Anderton lost against Bob Parker. Woods" candidacy, which began in late 2010, was centred on job creation in her electorate. She stated in her Labour selection speech that "Growing up here in the 1980s, I watched people lose their jobs.
I saw workplaces like the Addington Workshops shut their doors forever.
Now I am 36 years old and am watching jobs disappear from our communities again." Woods also cited the rising cost of living for everyday people as a major concern. Woods is currently the Labour Party"s spokesperson for the Environment and Climate Change and has previously served as the Party"s spokesperson for Tertiary Education and associate spokesperson for Science and Innovation.
Anderton remained an Member of Parliament until the end of the term of the 49th Parliament, and Woods won in the 2011 general election in the Wigram electorate. At the election, Woods won the seat with 45.11% of the vote and a majority of 1,500 votes. Woods won re-election in the 2014 election with an increased majority.
As the party obtained only 1.2% of the party vote, she did not enter Parliament that year.
Woods was a member of the Progressive Party from 1999 to 2007 and was involved in several of Jim Anderton"s re-election campaigns. She was a member of the Spreydon–Heathcote community board in Christchurch in 2004–2007. Woods was a key member of Anderton"s campaign committee, along with key Progressive Party members like Jeanette Lawrence and Liz Maunsell, and Labour activists such as campaign manager Tony Milne, Ben Ross and Liana Foster.
Member of Parliament.