1992 Wellington City mayoral election explained

Election Name:1992 Wellington City mayoral election
Country:New Zealand
Flag Image:Wellington Coat Of Arms.svg
Type:Presidential
Ongoing:no
Previous Election:1989 Wellington City mayoral election
Previous Year:1989
Next Election:1995 Wellington City mayoral election
Next Year:1995
Election Date:10 October 1992
Turnout:57,157 (53.26%)
Candidate1:Fran Wilde
Party1:New Zealand Labour Party
Popular Vote1:18,795
Percentage1:32.91%
Candidate2:Helene Ritchie
Party2:Independent politician
Popular Vote2:9,715
Percentage2:17.00%
Candidate3:Ken Comber
Party3:Wellington Citizens' Association
Popular Vote3:8,751
Percentage3:15.31%
Mayor
Before Election:Sir Jim Belich
Before Party:New Zealand Labour Party
After Election:Fran Wilde
After Party:New Zealand Labour Party

The 1992 Wellington City mayoral election was part of the held that same year. In 1992, elections were held for the Mayor of Wellington plus other local government roles including 21 councillors. The polling was conducted using the standard first-past-the-post electoral method.

The election saw Fran Wilde, the MP for Wellington Central, elected as the new mayor of Wellington replacing incumbent Sir Jim Belich who had retired after serving two terms. Wilde became Wellington's first female mayor, defeating former Deputy Mayor Helene Ritchie and her predecessor as MP for Wellington Central Ken Comber who ran for the Citizens' Association.

Background

In November 1991, former Deputy Mayor Helene Ritchie, was the first person to declare their candidacy.[1] The next day incumbent mayor, Sir Jim Belich, made inferences that he was considering standing for a third term. He would not rule out standing for re-election, but stated he would not make a final decision until February.[2] This was a surprise given Belich stated when he was first elected in 1986 that he wished to serve for only two terms. Ultimately Belich cited this pledge as his main reason when he decided not to stand again. He stated "I said if I couldn't do in six years what was in my power to do I'm not sure I could do more in nine. The main things on my agenda, formed after my election, have been done."[3]

Following Belich's decision to retire from the mayoralty, the Labour Party chose Wellington Central MP Fran Wilde as their candidate. Initially Eastern Ward councillor Nic Dalton was favoured to replace Belich though Dalton ruled himself out of contention for both the mayoralty and council.[4] [5] Attention then turned to Wilde's status as an MP with the prospect of her taking both a parliamentary and mayoral salary or the prospect of a by-election at taxpayer expense. Labour leader Mike Moore made known his preference for Wilde to remain in Parliament, offering to relieve her of portfolios to help with workload, although Wilde ultimately decided to resign from Parliament if elected mayor.[6]

The Citizens' Association had no shortage of people interested in being their mayoral candidate. Citizens' leader on the council Les Stephens, Eastern ward councillor Ruth Gotlieb, former councillor Bryan Weyburne, ex-deputy mayor Gavin Wilson and previous mayor Ian Lawrence were all approached by the selection committee. Insurance executive Boyd Klap, broadcaster Sharon Crosbie, management executive Basil Logan as well as two former National Party MPs, Ken Comber and Tony Friedlander, also spoke to Citizens' selectors.[7] Five names (Comber, Gotlieb, Lawrence, Stephens and Weyburne) went forward for the final selection panel. The association made a surprise choice, choosing Comber as their candidate for mayor.[8] Gotlieb ran for mayor and council regardless as an independent. Stephens in the Onslow ward, Weyburne ran in the Western ward and Lawrence for the Wellington Regional Council. Former Citizens' councillor David Bull ran for mayor again after breaking withe the ticket in 1989.[9]

Results

The following table gives the election results:

Results by ward

Fran Wilde polled the highest in all seven of Wellington's electoral wards.

Wards won by Wilde
Fran WildeHelene RitchieKen ComberStephen RainbowOthersTotal
Ward%%%%%
Eastern3,246 28.1 2,200 19.0 1,909 16.5 1,125 9.7 3,093 26.7 11,573
Lambton3,035 43.2 737 10.5 1,020 14.5 1,015 14.4 1,221 17.4 7,028
Northern2,295 29.0 1,810 22.9 1,006 12.7 634 8.0 2,160 27.4 7,905
Onslow2,151 34.0 838 13.2 1,101 17.4 600 9.5 1,644 25.9 6,334
Tawa1,153 24.6 928 19.8 856 18.3 377 8.1 1,366 29.2 4,680
Southern3,856 37.0 1,909 18.3 1,260 12.1 1,308 12.5 2,096 20.1 10,429
Western3,041 33.1 1,291 14.0 1,597 17.4 1,060 11.5 2,211 24.0 9,200
Totaldata-sort-value="Z"18,795 32.9 9,715 17.0 8,751 15.3 6,122 10.7 13,774 24.1 57,157

Ward results

See also: 1992 Wellington City local elections. Candidates were also elected from wards to the Wellington City Council.

Party/ticket Councillors
Citizens'6
Labour5
Greens4
Independent6

See also

Notes and References

  1. News: Finnegan . Annette . Ritchie joins mayoral hopefuls . . 12 November 1991 . 1 .
  2. News: Moran . Paul . . Belich indicates he may stand again . 13 November 1991 .
  3. News: Gosling . Martyn . Belich to quit mayoralty in October with few regrets . . 3 March 1992 .
  4. News: O'Leary . Eileen . . MP Wilde decides to contest mayoralty . 23 March 1992 .
  5. News: Morrison . Alistair . . Labour toys with the Wilde card . 19 March 1992 .
  6. News: . Moore wants Wilde to remain MP . 19 March 1992 .
  7. News: Belich undecided on bid . . 29 February 1992 .
  8. News: Citizens pick Comber for mayoralty . . 18 March 1992 .
  9. News: Bull to seek mayoralty as independent candidate . . 4 May 1992 .