2024 Tauranga mayoral election

2024 Tauranga mayoral election

20 July 2024
Turnout42,632 (38.98 1.43 pp)
 
Candidate Mahé Drysdale Greg Brownless
Affiliation Independent Independent
Primary vote 10,147 5,785
Percentage 23.80% 13.57%
Final vote 16,606 10,510

 
Candidate Ria Hall Tina Salisbury
Affiliation Independent Independent
Primary vote 6,808 5,096
Percentage 15.97% 11.95%
Final vote eliminated eliminated

Margin of victory by ward (primary vote)

Mayor before election

Under commission

Elected mayor

Mahé Drysdale
Independent

The 2024 Tauranga mayoral election was held to elect the mayor of Tauranga as part of the 2024 Tauranga local elections. The election took place between 29 June and 20 July 2024, with the official results released on 25 July. It was the first election since the Minister of Local Government appointed a Crown Commission on 9 February 2021 to oversee all of Tauranga City Council's governance responsibilities. The election was held using the Single Transferable Vote system.[1]

Mahé Drysdale was elected as mayor.

Background

The last mayor, Tenby Powell, was elected to the office in October 2019 but resigned in November 2020, eight months after he was unanimously censured by his council for an angry outburst.[2][3] Following further mayoral "outbursts,"[4][5] Powell publicly called for the Minister of Local Government to appoint a commission to replace the "dysfunctional" council.[6][7] The decision to cancel the election for a new mayor and councillors, and the appointment of a crown commission instead by Local Government minister Nanaia Mahuta was not without controversy. A legal opinion by law firm Russell McVeagh found her decision may have been "unlawful"[8] and Tauranga MP Simon Bridges called the decision "dramatic and draconian",[9] while saying that Powell quitting removed "a significant source of friction" and it was reasonable to assume the council would become more functional with the election of a new Mayor and Councillors.[10]

The 2022 local elections were cancelled by the government and the commission will remain in place until an election for members of the Tauranga City Council is held on 20 July 2024. Additionally, the Minister also decided to postpone the 2025 local election in Tauranga until 2028.[11] The council elected in 2024 will thus serve a four year term, a first for New Zealand.[12]

Key dates

Key dates for the election are:[13]

  • 19 April: Last day to switch electoral roll.
  • 26 April: Nominations opened for candidates.
  • 24 May: Nominations close.
  • 29 June – 3 July: Voting papers delivered.
  • 29 June: Special voting begins.
  • 20 July: Polling day. Voting documents needed to be at council before voting closes at 12 noon. Preliminary results available as soon as all ordinary votes are counted.
  • 23–25 July: Official results, including all valid ordinary and special votes, declared.

Candidates

Candidate Ticket (if any) Notes
Tanya Bamford-King Independent
Aureliu Braguta Independent
Greg Brownless Community Focus - Responsible Spending Mayor 2016–2019[14]
Andrew Caie Independent
Mahé Drysdale Olympic champion rower, grandson of former mayor Bob Owens[15]
Anthony Goddard
Chudleigh Haggett
Ria Hall Musician and television presenter[16]
Donna Hannah
BOP Hori Also stood in 2016[14]
Tim Maltby Our Rates are too High
Jos Nagels Visionary Leadership, Not Repeatership
Douglas Owens Independent Former Bay of Plenty regional councillor.[14] Son of former mayor Bob Owens, uncle of Mahé Drysdale[15]
John Robson[17] Principled; Professional; Democratic Councillor 2013-2016, 2018-2021[14][18]
Tina Salisbury People and Progress over Politics Deputy mayor 2020–2021[19]

Withdrawn

Results

The official results were released on 25 July,[24] showing Mahé Drysdale was elected as mayor.[25] Voter turnout was 38.77%,[25] which compares with a turnout of 40.28% at the 2019 election.[26]

Overall

2024 Tauranga mayoral election
Affiliation Candidate Primary vote % Final vote[a]
Independent Mahé Drysdale 10,147 23.80 16,606
Independent Greg Brownless 5,785 13.57 10,510
Independent Ria Hall 6,808 15.97
Independent Tina Salisbury 5,096 11.95
Independent Tim Maltby 3,287 7.71
Independent Douglas Owens 3,287 7.71
Independent John Robson 3,012 7.07
Independent Andrew Caie 1,273 2.99
Independent Tanya Bamford-King 898 2.11
Independent Jos Nagels 789 1.85
Independent Anthony Goddard 717 1.68
Independent Aureliu Braguta 480 1.13
Independent Chudleigh Haggett 237 0.56
Independent Donna Hannah 145 0.34
Independent BOP Hori 141 0.33
Valid 42,323 99.28
Informal 129 0.30
Blank 180 0.42
Total 42,632 38.98
Registered 109,381
Independent win

Primary vote by ward

Primary vote by ward[27]
Ward Margin (pp) Drysdale Brownless Hall Salisbury Other Total
Arataki 12.93 1,355 666 609 586 2,112 5,328
Bethlehem 10.65 1,493 890 513 777 1,988 5,661
Matua-Otūmoetai 3.82 1,372 1,142 709 861 1,942 6,026
Mauao/Mount Maunganui 14.16 1,231 579 604 571 1,442 4,427
Pāpāmoa 13.32 1,252 607 621 394 1,865 4,739
Tauriko 14.62 1,269 610 421 604 1,604 4,508
Te Awanui 75.99 149 42 2,175 83 217 2,666
Te Papa 9.17 890 547 493 453 1,357 3,740
Welcome Bay 8.30 1,136 702 663 767 1,960 5,228
Total 7.89 10,147 5,785 6,808 5,096 14,487 42,323

Notes

  1. ^ Rounded to whole number.

References

  1. ^ "Elections 2024 > Information for voters". www.tauranga.govt.nz. Tauranga City Council. Retrieved 3 May 2024.
  2. ^ "'I made a mistake': Tauranga mayor told to apologise for 'outburst'". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  3. ^ "SunLive – Mayor to apologise for "bullying comments" – The Bay's News First". Sunlive.co.nz. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  4. ^ "Tauranga mayor Tenby Powell in informal meeting". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  5. ^ "Tauranga mayor's profanity-laced flip-flop over quitting". Stuff.co.nz. 3 August 2020. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  6. ^ Shand, Matt (20 November 2020). "Tauranga mayor resigns, calls for commissioner to be appointed". Waikato Times. Stuff. Archived from the original on 20 November 2020.
  7. ^ "Tauranga mayor's shock resignation: Tenby Powell calls for Government to step in". Bay of Plenty Times. The New Zealand Herald. 20 November 2020. Archived from the original on 20 November 2020. Retrieved 20 November 2020.
  8. ^ "SunLive – Commissioners appointment labelled "unlawful" – The Bay's News First". Sunlive.co.nz. Retrieved 16 January 2022.
  9. ^ Motion, Samantha (25 November 2020). "'Draconian': Simon Bridges urges minister not to intervene in council". The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 11 July 2022.
  10. ^ Motion, Samantha (25 November 2020). "'Draconian': Simon Bridges urges minister not to intervene in council". Bay of Plenty Times.
  11. ^ "Dates for the Tauranga City Council Election in July 2024 and the Following Election". New Zealand Gazette. 22 August 2023. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  12. ^ Evans, Alisha (1 February 2024). "Tauranga City Council election: Four-year council term a first for New Zealand". Bay of Plenty Times. New Zealand Herald.
  13. ^ "Elections 2024". Tauranga City Council. Retrieved 30 April 2024.
  14. ^ a b c d Gillespie, Kiri; Wilson, Megan (24 May 2024). "Tauranga election: Who's running and what you need to know about voting". NZ Herald. Retrieved 24 May 2024.
  15. ^ a b Sylvester, Catherine (19 May 2024). "Tauranga election: Olympian Mahé Drysdale announces bid for mayor". Bay of Plenty Times. New Zealand Herald.
  16. ^ McConnell, Glenn. "Tauranga's star studded return to democracy". www.stuff.co.nz. Stuff. Retrieved 5 May 2024.
  17. ^ Gillespie, Kiri (14 May 2024). "Tauranga City Council election: Several sacked councillors running again". New Zealand Herald.
  18. ^ Evans, Alisha (24 May 2024). "Tauranga City Council election hopefuls confirmed". SunLive. Retrieved 24 May 2024.
  19. ^ Evans, Alisha (26 April 2024). "Tina Salisbury to run for Tauranga mayoralty". SunLive. Retrieved 30 April 2024.
  20. ^ "Dr. Eric Chuah Standing For Mayor Of Tauranga". scoop.co.nz. 17 May 2024.
  21. ^ "Eric Chuah". Facebook. 24 May 2024.
  22. ^ "Elections 2024". Tauranga City Council. Archived from the original on 20 May 2024.
  23. ^ "Elections 2024". Tauranga City Council.
  24. ^ "Elections 2024". Tauranga City Council. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  25. ^ a b "2024 Council Elections DECLARATION OF RESULT" (PDF). Tauranga City Council. Retrieved 25 July 2024.
  26. ^ Wilson, Megan. "Mount Maunganui's Jen Scoular only woman elected in Tauranga City Council 2024 election". Bay of Plenty Times. The New Zealand Herald. Retrieved 22 July 2022.
  27. ^ "Tauranga City Council: 2024 LG Elections – Mayoralty First Preferences by Ward". Tauranga City Council. 24 July 2024.