2025 Dunedin City Council election
11 October 2025
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| Turnout | 43,310 (45.47%) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
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15 seats on the Dunedin City Council 8 seats needed for a majority | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
This lists parties that won seats. See the complete results below. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
The 2025 Dunedin City Council election was a local election held from 9 September to 11 October in Dunedin, New Zealand as part of that year's nation-wide local elections. Voters elected the mayor of Dunedin and 14 city councillors, and other local representatives for the 2025–2028 term of the Dunedin City Council. Postal voting and the single transferable vote system were used.
Councillor Sophie Barker won the mayoralty, defeating incumbent mayor Jules Radich.
Key dates
- 4 July 2025: Nominations for candidates opened
- 1 August 2025: Nominations for candidates closed at 12 pm
- 9 September 2025: Voting documents were posted and voting opened
- 11 October 2025: Voting closed at 12 pm and progress/preliminary results were published
- 16–19 October 2025: Final results were declared.[1][2]
Background
Positions up for election
Voters in the city elected the mayor of Dunedin, 14 city councillors at-large, the members of six community boards,[a] and the members of the Oamaru Licensing Trust.[3][1] They also elected 7 members of the Otago Regional Council.[b][2]
Campaign
Debates
On 17 June 2025, Dunedin climate advocate Bruce Mahalski held a public meeting for DCC council and mayoral candidates to field questions on climate change issues including a commercial train service, the city's Zero Carbon Plan 2030, and relations between the DCC and Otago Regional Council (ORC). Mayoral candidates Cr Sophie Barker and Andrew Simms, and city council candidates Cr Marie Laufiso, Cr Jim O'Malley and Lily Warring spoke at the meeting, which was attended by 50 people.[4]
Issues
One key election issue has been the proposed landfill site at Smooth Hill. While the incumbent Mayor Jules Radich has supported the Smooth Hill landfill site, mayoral candidate Andrew Simms and his Future Dunedin ticket have opposed the new landfill site.[5]
On 23 September, 15 left-wing DCC and ORC candidates established an alternative progressive alliance called "The People's Hub" to advocate on shared values such as climate action, social justice, traffic speed reductions and reviving passenger trains. The group consisted of candidates from the Labour, Green parties, the Radical Action Faction and Building Kotahitaka including Cr Steve Walker, Cr Marie Laufiso, Cr Alan Somerville and ORC candidate Alex King. The group established a hub at the corner of George Street and Moray Place in Dunedin to promote their causes and encourage people to vote.[6]
List of candidates
Incumbents not seeking re-election
- David Benson-Pope, incumbent councillor since 2013[7][8]
Mayor
Incumbent mayor Jules Radich would stand again as an independent candidate.[9] Other independent candidates included councillors Sophie Barker, Carmen Houlahan, Mandy Mayhem, and Lee Vandervis.[10] Candidates standing under a ticket are Marie Laufiso as the Building Kotahitaka candidate,[11] Andrew Simms as the Future Dunedin candidate and Mickey Treadwell as the Green candidate.[12][13]
Endorsements
In mid June 2025, former Team Dunedin councillors Andrew Whiley and Kevin Gilbert endorsed Sophie Barker as mayoral candidate.[14]
Councillors
Fourteen councillors will be elected at-large to the city council.[3]
| Candidate[10] | Affiliation[c] | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bill Acklin | Independent | Incumbent councillor[16][17] | |
| Lachlan Akers | None | ||
| Lync Aronson | Independent-Fully Funded City Council | Also running for mayor | |
| Sophie Barker | Independent – working for you | Incumbent councillor.[17] Also running for mayor. | |
| Tony Bennett | None | ||
| Rachel Brazil | Independent | Lawyer.[18] Was previously affiliated with the Future Dunedin ticket but withdrew on 20 August after facing criticism for sharing a leaked confidential report about DCC chief executive Sandy Graham.[19] | |
| Heike Cebulla-Elder | None | High School teacher[20] | |
| John Chambers | Your Health Candidate | Former head of the emergency department at Dunedin Hospital[21] | |
| Sarah Davie-Nitis | Independent | ||
| Cyndee Elder | Building Kotahitaka | Creator of Able Abodes, a tiny home project.[22] | |
| Rose Finnie | Green | Support worker[13] | |
| Jo Galer | Independent | Leader of the Southern Heritage Trust and Otago Regional Council communications professional[23] She left the Future Dunedin ticket to stand as an independent candidate in late August 2025 following disagreements with the leadership.[24] | |
| Christine Garey | Independent | Incumbent councillor[16][17] | |
| Kevin Gilbert | Independent | Incumbent councillor[17] | |
| Jett Groshinski | Labour | Otago University Students' Association politics representative and 2022 mayoral and local council candidate[25][16] | |
| Doug Hall | None | Also running for mayor | |
| Robert Hamlin | Independent | University of Otago Business School lecturer. Was previously running under the Future Dunedin ticket until he was removed after he circulated an email criticising the use of karakia (Māori prayers) at university meetings.[26] | |
| Karl Hart | None | ||
| Jarrod Hodson | Future Dunedin | West Harbour community board member[27] and commercial manager[18][23] | |
| Carmen Houlahan | Independent | Incumbent councillor.[16][17] Also running for mayor. | |
| Marita Johnson | Independent | Previously stood for council in 2022[28] | |
| Anthony Kenny | ACT Local | Former Royal New Zealand Navy serviceman[29][30] | |
| Anna Knight | Building Kotahitaka | ||
| Richard Knights | Independent | ||
| Marie Laufiso | Building Kotahitaka | Incumbent councillor.[17] Also running for mayor. | |
| Cherry Lucas | Independent | Deputy mayor and incumbent city councillor[16][17] | |
| Russell Lund | Independent | ||
| Lianna MacFarlane | Independent | Also running for mayor | |
| Mandy Mayhem | None | Incumbent councillor.[17] Also running for mayor.[31][16] | |
| David Milne | Independent | Also running for mayor. | |
| Jim O'Malley | Independent | Incumbent councillor[17] | |
| Hugh "Captain" O'Neill | Independent | ||
| Jen Olsen | The Radical Action Faction | ||
| Benedict Ong | None | Also running for mayor | |
| Marian Poole | None | ||
| Paul Pope | Independent | Incumbent chair of the Otago Peninsula community board[32] | |
| Bruce Ranga | Future Dunedin | Former CEO of the Torres Strait Island Regional Council and member of the Te Pae Oranga Iwi Community Panel[23] | |
| Evelyn Robertson | Independent | Events Lead Dunedin Pride [33] | |
| Daniel Rooney | None | ||
| Andrew Simms | Future Dunedin | Businessman, Mosgiel-Taieri Community Board chairman and founder of Future Dunedin. Also running for mayor.[18] | |
| Conrad Stedman | Future Dunedin | Former city councillor[18][23] | |
| Andrew Sutton | Future Dunedin | President of Taieri Cricket Club and school boards chairperson[23] | |
| Amy Taylor | Future Dunedin | Volunteer and disability advocate[18][23] | |
| Pamela Taylor | Independent | Previously ran for council and for the mayoralty in 2022.[34] Also running for mayor. | |
| Sue Todd | Independent | ||
| Mickey Treadwell | Green | Video game programmer and part-time lecturer.[13] Also running for mayor. | |
| Rebecca Twemlow | Future Dunedin | Director of Business South and former Vice President of the Otago Chamber of Commerce[18][23] | |
| Lee Vandervis | Independent | Incumbent councillor.[17] Also running for mayor.[31][16] | |
| Steve Walker | Labour | Incumbent councillor[25][16][17] | |
| Lily Warring | Green | Visual designer[13] | |
| Brent Weatherall | None | Incumbent councillor since 2022[17] | |
| Andrew Whiley | Independent | Incumbent councillor[16][17] | |
| Paul Williams | None | ||
Results
Overall turnout for this election was 45.47%, with 43,310 voting papers returned.[35]
With final results, the following candidates were elected:[35]
Mayor
Councillor Sophie Barker was confirmed as mayor, with Andrew Simms coming in second place. Incumbent mayor Jules Radich came in fourth place, behind councillor Lee Vandervis.[36]
Council
| Affiliation | Candidate | Iteration | Iteration quota | Votes received | Status | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Future Dunedin | Andrew Simms | 1 | 2,812.53 | 7,540 | elected | |
| Independent | Lee Vandervis | 1 | 2,812.53 | 6,461 | elected | |
| Independent | Jules Radich | 2 | 2,780.07 | 2,916.22 | elected | |
| Building Kotahitaka | Marie Laufiso | 47 | 2,740.95 | 2,785.30 | elected | |
| Your Health Candidate | John Chambers | 65 | 2,698.39 | 2,769.72 | elected | |
| Independent | Russell Lund | 69 | 2,676.47 | 2,733.16 | elected | |
| None | Brent Weatherall | 74 | 2,651.79 | 2,664.26 | elected | |
| Labour | Steve Walker | 76 | 2,635.08 | 2,669.64 | elected | |
| Independent | Cherry Lucas | 76 | 2,635.08 | 2,656.05 | elected | |
| Green | Mickey Treadwell | 77 | 2,628.08 | 2,657.52 | elected | |
| None | Mandy Mayhem | 81 | 2,585.49 | 2,651.26 | elected | |
| None | Benedict Ong | 81 | 2,585.49 | 2,596.35 | elected | |
| Independent | Christine Garey | 84 | 2,570.55 | 2,592.23 | elected | |
| None | Doug Hall | 87 | 2,562.79 | 2,576.80 | elected | |
| Future Dunedin | Bruce Ranga | 87 | 2,562.79 | 2,372.24 | excluded (seats filled) | |
| Independent | Andrew Whiley | 78 | 2,624.23 | 1,739.29 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Carmen Houlahan | 75 | 2,651.35 | 1,563.20 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Future Dunedin | Conrad Stedman | 71 | 2,672.67 | 1,438.44 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Bill Acklin | 68 | 2,686.05 | 1,270.41 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Future Dunedin | Rachel Brazil | 66 | 2,697.02 | 1,174.07 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent-Fully Funded City Council | Lync Aronson | 64 | 2,705.74 | 1,024.80 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Green | Rose Finnie | 62 | 2,712.15 | 913.84 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Future Dunedin | Jo Galer | 60 | 2,718.65 | 875.96 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Future Dunedin | Rebecca (Bex) Twemlow | 58 | 2,723.72 | 813.01 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Paul Pope | 56 | 2,728.07 | 780.82 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Jim O'Malley | 54 | 2,731.38 | 726.01 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Lianna MacFarlane | 52 | 2,734.47 | 644.38 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Green | Lily Warring | 50 | 2,736.18 | 613.14 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Future Dunedin | Andrew Sutton | 48 | 2,740.64 | 570.30 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Richard Knights | 46 | 2,743.86 | 537.35 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Future Dunedin | Jarrod Hodson | 44 | 2,747.42 | 508.82 | excluded (least votes) | |
| ACT Local | Anthony Kenny | 42 | 2,752.19 | 467.57 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Sarah Davie-Nitis | 40 | 2,755.35 | 450.57 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Kevin Gilbert | 38 | 2,756.97 | 428.63 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Labour | Jett Groshinski | 36 | 2,758.86 | 402.10 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Hugh O'Neill | 34 | 2,762.35 | 310.62 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | David Milne | 33 | 2,763.23 | 304.63 | excluded (least votes) | |
| None | Tony Bennett | 30 | 2,764.69 | 298.015 | excluded (least votes) | |
| None | Heike Cebulla-Elder | 27 | 2,765.73 | 280.59 | excluded (least votes) | |
| None | Paul Williams | 25 | 2,767.26 | 277.53 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Sue Todd | 22 | 2,769.02 | 267.00 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Robert Hamlin | 20 | 2,769.49 | 258.77 | excluded (least votes) | |
| None | Lachlan Akers | 18 | 2,770.22 | 234.10 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Pamela Taylor | 16 | 2,771.76 | 231.14 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Future Dunedin | Amy Taylor | 14 | 2,772.67 | 209.76 | excluded (least votes) | |
| The Radical Action Faction | Jen Olsen | 13 | 2,773.25 | 187.30 | excluded (least votes) | |
| None | Daniel Rooney | 12 | 2,774.82 | 183.58 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Building Kotahitaka | Anna Knight | 11 | 2,775.04 | 115.29 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Evelyn Robertson | 10 | 2,775.08 | 78.16 | excluded (least votes) | |
| None | Marian Poole | 9 | 2,775.40 | 67.52 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Building Kotahitaka | Cyndee Elder | 8 | 2,775.71 | 67.00 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent | Marita Johnson | 5 | 2,776.18 | 52.76 | excluded (least votes) | |
| None | Karl Hart | 4 | 2,776.51 | 18.76 | excluded (least votes) | |
| Independent - working for you | Sophie Barker | 1 | 2,812.53 | – | withdrawn (elected mayor) | |
| Informal | 579 | |||||
| Blank | 423 | |||||
| Turnout | ||||||
See also
Notes
- ^ Strath Taieri, Waikouaiti Coast, Mosgiel-Taieri, Saddle Hill, West Harbour, and Otago Peninsula.
- ^
- 5 councillors will represent the city exclusively.
- 2 councilors will represent parts of the city and parts of neighbouring Clutha District.
- ^ A candidate may leave their affiliation blank, run as an independent, or run with an affiliation to an organisation, local body ticket or political party.[15]
References
- ^ a b "Pukapuka Aratohu Kaitonopōti | Candidate Handbook" (PDF). www.dunedin.govt.nz. Dunedin City Council. Retrieved 4 July 2025.
- ^ a b "2025 Elections". www.orc.govt.nz. Otago Regional Council. Archived from the original on 23 April 2025. Retrieved 7 April 2025.
- ^ a b "Elections". www.dunedin.govt.nz. Dunedin City Council. Archived from the original on 19 March 2025. Retrieved 7 April 2025.
- ^ Shaw, Ruby (18 June 2025). "Council hopefuls talk about climate change". Otago Daily Times. Archived from the original on 19 June 2025. Retrieved 1 July 2025.
- ^ Mathias, Shanti (16 September 2025). "The disagreement over Dunedin's new dump". The Spinoff. Archived from the original on 19 September 2025. Retrieved 21 September 2025.
- ^ Miller, Grant (23 September 2025). "People's Hub a 'progressive alternative'". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 27 November 2025.
- ^ "Cr David Benson-Pope". www.dunedin.govt.nz. Dunedin City Council. Retrieved 2 August 2025.
- ^ "Elections to be well contested". The Star. Otago Daily Times. 7 August 2025. Retrieved 8 August 2025.
- ^ Miller, Grant (12 October 2024). "Radich keen to keep hold of mayoral chain". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 7 April 2025.
- ^ a b "2025 Triennial Elections | Dunedin City Council". www.electionz.com. electionz.com. Retrieved 5 August 2025.
- ^ Scott, Tim "Out-of-the box solutions the key", Otago Daily Times, 5 Aug 2025, retrieved 19 Aug 2025
- ^ Manhire, Toby (7 February 2025). "Who is in and who is out in the big mayoral races of 2025?". The Spinoff. Archived from the original on 7 April 2025. Retrieved 7 April 2025.
- ^ a b c d "Thriving communities sought by Greens candidates". Otago Daily Times. 27 May 2025. Archived from the original on 26 May 2025. Retrieved 26 May 2025.
- ^ Shaw, Ruby (17 June 2025). "Radich allies switch to Barker". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 19 June 2025.
- ^ "Pukapuka Aratohu Kaitonopōti | Candidate Handbook" (PDF). www.dunedin.govt.nz. Dunedin City Council. p. 15. Retrieved 6 July 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Shaw, Ruby (22 May 2025). "Nine city councillors confirm intention to seek re-election". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 22 May 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m "Mayor and Councillors". www.dunedin.govt.nz. Dunedin City Council. Retrieved 25 July 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f MacLean, Hamish (17 March 2025). "New 'Future Dunedin' DCC ticket declared". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 20 May 2025.
- ^ Shaw, Ruby (22 August 2025). "Simms says ticket not 'crumbling' after latest departure". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 22 August 2025.
- ^ "LPHS teaching staff".
- ^ Littlewood, Matthew (12 June 2025). "Former ED head John Chambers to run for council". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 14 July 2025.
- ^ Tomsett, Ben. "Dunedin tiny home development aims to provide affordable housing". NZ Herald. Retrieved 18 August 2025.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Home". Future Dunedin. Archived from the original on 21 May 2025. Retrieved 21 May 2025.
- ^ Scott, Tim (25 August 2025). "Another candidate leaves ticket". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 26 August 2025.
- ^ a b "Labour endorsing candidates in DCC election". Otago Daily Times. APL. 21 May 2025. Archived from the original on 20 May 2025. Retrieved 20 May 2025.
- ^ Littlewood, Matthew (26 March 2025). "Mayoral hopeful dumps candidate over karakia critique". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 21 May 2025.
- ^ "West Harbour". www.dunedin.govt.nz. Dunedin City Council. Retrieved 30 July 2025.
- ^ "Dunedin council nominations finalised". Otago Daily Times. 12 August 2022. Retrieved 11 July 2025.
- ^ ACT New Zealand (27 June 2025). "Local Business Owner & Former Royal New Zealand Navy Serviceman, Anthony Kenny, Selected As ACT Local Candidate For DCC". www.scoop.co.nz. Scoop. Retrieved 27 June 2025.
- ^ "Ex-navy serviceman named Act candidate". Otago Daily Times. 28 June 2025. Retrieved 29 June 2025.
- ^ a b Shaw, Ruby (22 May 2025). "Eighth time lucky for Vandervis in mayoral bid?". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 21 May 2025.
- ^ "Otago Peninsula". www.dunedin.govt.nz. Dunedin City Council. Retrieved 30 July 2025.
- ^ "City celebrates Pride". Otago Daily Times Online News. 6 March 2025. Retrieved 24 August 2025.
- ^ McNeilly, Hamish (18 August 2022). "Conspiracy theorist Pamela Taylor running for Dunedin mayoralty". Stuff. Retrieved 31 July 2025.
- ^ a b "2025 Triennial Elections DECLARATION OF RESULT" (PDF). www.electionz.com. Dunedin City Council. Retrieved 19 October 2025.
- ^ "Sophie Barker confirmed as Dunedin's next mayor". RNZ. 13 October 2025. Retrieved 13 October 2025.