Education
Born in Christchurch, Wagner received a teaching degree from Christchurch College of Education, a Bachelor from Canterbury University, and an Master of Business Administration from Massey University.
Born in Christchurch, Wagner received a teaching degree from Christchurch College of Education, a Bachelor from Canterbury University, and an Master of Business Administration from Massey University.
After working for a time as a teacher, she entered the business world, and established a successful fashion marketing company and later an internet marketing business. She was an internet pioneer establishing firstly FashioNZ a website to support the New Zealand fashion industry and GardenNZ for the gardening industry. In 2003 Wagner was elected to the Canterbury Regional Council, and was a councillor until 2007.
She contested the Christchurch Central electorate for the National Party in the 2005 general elections.
Prior to her election, Wagner had endorsed the New Zealand Flag.com Trust"s campaign for a referendum on New Zealand"s flag, stating "Our flag should celebrate our nation"s identity and our special foot-print on this earth. We will always respect and cherish our links with the past that are represented in our present flag but a young country needs to create a strong vision for its future." In her first term in Parliament she sat on the Justice and Electoral select committee and later the Local Government and Environment Committee.
She remained in Parliament, having been re-elected through the National Party list. This marked the first time National had ever held the Christchurch Central electorate since its creation in 1946.
Wagner was the Chair of the Local Government and Environment Select Committee and sat on the Maori Affairs Select Committee.
She also chaired the BlueGreens Caucus Committee and the Arts, Culture and Heritage Caucus Committee. In 2013 she was appointed Parliamentary Private Secretary to Gerry Brownlee and Nick Smith in the Christchurch Earthquake Recovery and Environment portfolios, respectively. The boundaries of the Christchurch Central electorate have been redrawn for the 2014 election.
When the draft boundaries were published for consultation, Wagner declared the electorate as more Labour focussed and "unwinnable" due to the proposed loss of more affluent suburbs.
When the final boundaries were released in April 2014, Wagner vowed to stand again and fight for re-election. She is ranked 23 on the party list.
Recontesting Christchurch Central in the 2008 general election, Wagner drastically cut Labour"s majority in both the electorate and the party vote, reducing the candidate majority from 7,836 to 936.