1980 Porirua mayoral election explained

Election Name:1980 Porirua mayoral election
Country:New Zealand
Flag Image:File:Porirua CoA shield+crest.svg
Type:Presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1977 Porirua mayoral election
Previous Year:1977
Next Election:1983 Porirua mayoral election
Next Year:1983
Election Date:11 October 1980
Turnout:11,540
Candidate1:Whitford Brown
Party1:Independent politician
Popular Vote1:8,250
Percentage1:71.49
Candidate2:Eric McKenzie
Party2:New Zealand Labour Party
Popular Vote2:3,174
Percentage2:27.50
Mayor
Before Election:Whitford Brown
After Election:Whitford Brown

The 1980 Porirua mayoral election was part of the New Zealand local elections held that same year. The elections were held for the role of Mayor of Porirua plus other local government positions including fifteen city councillors, also elected triennially. The polling was conducted using the standard first-past-the-post electoral method.

Background

Prior to the election there was a minor controversy on the council. In early 1980 Porirua's Town Clerk, Gordon Gandell, retired. The former deputy mayor of neighbouring Lower Hutt, John Seddon, was employed for the role. Allegations ensued that his appointment had been a "jack up" by the Labour majority on the city council and his friendship with deputy mayor John Burke. A group of senior Porirua City Council officers jointly signed a letter during the appointment row saying he wasn't the right man for the job. Seddon was not an accountant, the usual prior professional qualification of town clerks at that time, but he had been responsible for managing a company with three times the asset turnover of the Porirua City Council. Ombudsman Lester Castle was called in and eventually cleared the appointment process as being sufficiently objective.[1] Labour lost their council majority at the election which was attributed to the employment controversy. Several Labour councillors were dumped from the party ticket prior to the election. One, Ivan Hardgrave, stood instead as an independent candidate and was successful.[2]

The election also saw the introduction of a new party to contest control of the council with the emergence of the Rates Reform ticket. Founded in early 1979, the Rates Reform group accused local bodies of excessive spending and wanted a cessation to rates increases funded by cutting services and council staff.[3]

Councillor results

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Notes and References

  1. News: Council survivor outlasts his critics . Hawkins . Barry . 2 July 1997 . . 9 .
  2. News: Labour pays the price — falls with mighty thump in local polls . . 13 October 1980 . 2 .
  3. News: New group wants rates reform . . 23 January 1979 . 1 .