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Kiwi Politician Drops 'OK Boomer' Retort At Heckling Rival

Chlöe Swarbrick fired back during a debate on climate change in New Zealand's Parliament.

A New Zealand politician jeered a 25-year-old rival after she used her age to make a point about climate change and elicited a stinging remark that’s now going viral.

Green Party member of Parliament Chlöe Swarbrick was heckled by a National Party MP on Tuesday less than a minute into her address on the country’s efforts to combat the climate crisis, reported New Zealand’s Stuff website.

“In the year 2050, I will be 56 years old. Yet, right now, the average age of this 52nd parliament is 49 years old,” she said, before being interrupted.

“OK Boomer,” Swarbrick quickly fired back, before continuing with her speech.

Check out the video here:

According to Swarbrick, she received backlash for the retort ― which The New York Times’ Taylor Lorenz last month explained had become millennials’ and Generation Z’s go-to response to “the problem of older people who just don’t get it” with regards to issues including financial inequality and climate change. “Boomer” is a reference to the baby boomer generation, or those born between 1946 and 1964.

“Today I have learnt that responding succinctly and in perfect jest to somebody heckling you about *your age* as you speak about the impact of climate change on *your generation* with the literal title of their generation makes some people very mad,” she wrote on Facebook in response to the video.

“So I guess millennials ruined humor. That, or we just need to pull ourselves up by our bootstraps and abstain from avocados,” she added, referencing an oft-suggested and misguided financial tip for younger generations. “That’s the joke.”

The New Zealand Parliament’s social media team also apparently didn’t get the memo about the “OK Boomer” meme, as it incorrectly subtitled her response as “OK, Berma.” It later apologised for the gaffe on Twitter:

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