New Zealand Parliament To Discuss Teen Social Media Ban

Share

A wave of proposed social media bans for teens has swept the globe recently, fuelled by mounting concern about the obvious damages the likes of TikTok, Instagram and Snapchat can cause to young minds.

New Zealand Parliament is planning to introduce a bill to restrict social media for children under 16, officials said on Thursday, building momentum for parliament’s efforts to prevent young people from being harmed while online.

The suggested legislation will require social media platforms to conduct an age verification process, similar to Australia’s world-first teen social media ban law passed in 2024.

A member’s bill submitted in May by ruling National Party lawmaker Catherine Wedd to restrict children using social media was selected on Thursday to be introduced in the parliament.

The bill has received support from National Party members but its coalition partners have not confirmed whether they will support the bill.

A New Zealand parliamentary committee has been looking at the impact of social media harm on young people and the roles that government, business, and society should play in addressing those harms. A report is due in early 2026, according to a statement from the committee last week.

Prime Minister Christopher Luxon has been raising concerns about harms to mental health from the overuse of social media among young teens, including misinformation, bullying and harmful depictions of body image.

Civil-liberties organisation PILLAR said the bill would not protect children online, and instead would create serious privacy risks and restrict online freedom for New Zealanders.

“Aligning with international efforts may sound responsible, but it is lazy policymaking,” PILLAR Executive Director Nathan Seiuli said in a statement. 

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *