Menéndez March moved to New Zealand from Tijuana, Baja California, Mexico in 2006.[4] He worked as a film projectionist for a decade in Auckland, but was made redundant due to film digitisation. After that role, he worked in hospitality, then in migrant advocacy.[5]
Menéndez March served as male co-convenor of Young Greens of Aotearoa New Zealand in 2016.[6] At the University of Auckland Public Policy Club Baby Back Benches debate in 2016, a group of Young New Zealand First members started chanting "Build the Wall" at Menéndez March, who is of Mexican descent. Young New Zealand First later apologised to him.[7]
Menéndez March is the coordinator for Auckland Action Against Poverty,[8] a role he took up in late 2017. A writer for Stuff described him in 2020 as "a thorn in the side of the Labour-led Government in the past few years". In this role, he had frequently appeared on television, radio, and quoted in newspapers – once a week on average, by his estimate – stating that the government had been failing the poor, that benefits are too low and housing is too expensive.[5] Menéndez March has been particularly critical of KiwiBuild, arguing that the scheme should be targeted towards working poor and unemployed families and that the current set up will make homeownership rates fall further by encouraging increased property speculation and gentrification.[9]
Menéndez March ran for the Green Party in the 2017 New Zealand general election. He ran in the Mount Roskill electorate and received 1,200 votes.[5] He was 21 on the party list, and was placed too far down to be allocated a seat.[11]
First term, 2020–2023
For the 2020 New Zealand general election, Menéndez March was placed tenth on the Green party list, and ran for the Maungakiekie electorate.[12] During the election campaign, he criticised his party co-leader James Shaw for supporting $11.7m of funding for a private green school.[13] Menéndez March did not win the Maungakiekie electorate, coming third place behind the National MP Denise Lee and Labour MP Priyanca Radhakrishnan, with 2,666 votes.[14] However, the Greens received 7.9% of the party vote (226,754),[15] and his list placement was high enough for him to enter Parliament as a list MP.[16][17] Menéndez March was one of three new Green MPs in the 53rd Parliament.[3][18]
In December 2020, Menéndez March travelled to Mexico during the COVID-19 pandemic to care for his family. His step-mother had aggressive cancer and had been given months to live, and his father had had major surgery with long-lasting effects. The person who had cared for the couple had become extremely ill herself and was unable to care for them.[19] He was criticised by opposition leader Judith Collins for doing so.[20] In late February, Menéndez March drew media attention after National MP Chris Bishop disclosed that Menéndez March had made two attempts to gain a place in "managed isolation and quarantine" for "national interest" reasons.[21]
During the 2023 election held on 14 October, Menéndez March came third place in Mount Albert behind Labour MP Helen White and National MP Melissa Lee, with 9,296 votes.[23] Despite failing to take Mount Albert, Menéndez March was re-elected to Parliament on the Green party list.[24]
In late November 2023, Menéndez March assumed the Green Party's social development and employment, workforce planning and development, immigration, and associate health (primary health) portfolios. He also became the Musterer for the Green Party.[25]
On 30 July 2024, Trade MinisterTodd McClay was recorded as saying "you're not in Mexico now, we don't do things like that here" to Menéndez March during a parliamentary sitting. Menéndez March subsequently raised the matter with SpeakerGerry Brownlee, who ordered McClay to withdraw and apologise. Following the incident, Menéndez March described McClay's remarks as "pretty racist and unacceptable".[26]
Views and positions
Political views
Menéndez identifies as a "proud socialist" and a "true Marxist".[1][27] He said that the Green Party would work hard to offer support to Labour to enact "genuine bold socialist policy".[28]
Anti-monarchism
Before sitting in Parliament, Menéndez March expressed reluctance to swearing the required Oath of Allegiance to the Queen of New Zealand, Elizabeth II. He posted a meme about it, which received criticism from monarchists. He did however take the oath.[29]
Israel-Palestine
In May 2021, Menéndez March drew media attention after he posted pictures on himself on Facebook and Twitter with the caption. "From the river to the sea, Palestine will be free!" in response to the 2021 Israel-Palestine crisis. The New Zealand Jewish Council criticised Menéndez March's post, claiming that the slogan was used by Hamas to promote antisemitism and the ethnic cleansing of Jews.[30] However, the use of the slogan was defended by Alternative Jewish Voice, arguing that freedom is not "a zero-sum business".[31] Menéndez March's posts led the libertarianACT Party's Deputy Leader Brooke Van Velden to oppose the Green Party's motion calling for Members of Parliament to recognise the right of Palestinians to self-determination and statehood. In response to Van Velden's criticism, Green MP Golriz Ghahraman asserted that Menéndez March was defending the rights of both Arabs and Jews to having equal rights in their homeland.[32][33]