Mayor of Chatham Islands explained

Post:Mayor
Body:the Chatham Islands Council
Flag:File:Flag of Chatham Islands.svg
Flagcaption:Unofficial flag of the Chatham Islands
Incumbent:Monique Croon
Incumbentsince:2019
Inaugural:Patrick Smith
Style:Her Worship
Termlength:Three years
Formation:1995
Website:Official website
Deputy:Keri Lea Day

The Mayor of Chatham Islands is the head of the local government of the Chatham Islands, New Zealand, and presides over the Chatham Islands Council.

Patrick Smith served as mayor of the Chatham Islands from 1992 until his retirement in 2010.[1]

Smith was succeeded by deputy mayor Alfred Preece, who acted as mayor until he was elected to the position in 2010.[1] [2] [3] Preece had initially been invited to run for council by Mayor Smith.[4] He is the son of Alfred "Bunty" Preece QSO, a former chairman of the Chatham Islands County Council.[5] [6] [7]

Monique Croon is the current mayor of the Chatham Islands.[8] She was first elected in the 2019 local elections.[9]

List of mayors

NameTerm
Patrick Smith QSO1992–2010
Alfred Preece2010–2019
Monique Croon2019–present

List of deputy mayors

NameTerm
Alfred Preece2001–2010
Jeffrey Clarke[10] [11] ?–2019
Greg Horler[12] [13] 2019–2022
Keri Lea Day2022–present

Mayoral elections

Mayoral elections take place in the Chatham Islands every 3 years, as part of the wider local elections in New Zealand. Under section 10 of the Local Electoral Act 2001, a "general election of members of every local authority or community board must be held on the second Saturday in October in every third year" from the date the Act came into effect in 2001.[14]

2001 Chatham Islands mayoral election

This was the first election held following the Local Electoral Act 2001. Patrick Smith won re-election, retaining the mayoralty.

2004 Chatham Islands mayoral election

This election was held using the single transferable vote (STV) system.[15]

Once again, Patrick Smith won re-election.

2007 Chatham Islands mayoral election

The Chatham Islands retained the STV system used in the prior election. Patrick Smith won re-election.

2010 Chatham Islands mayoral election

For this election, the Chatham Islands Council abolished STV and adopted first-past-the-post voting.[16]

On 31 January 2010, Patrick Smith resigned from the mayoralty, and was immediately succeeded as acting mayor by his deputy, Alfred Preece. Preece ran for the 2010 election and retained the mayoralty on 9 October, defeating challenger Joseph Tapara.[17]

2013 Chatham Islands mayoral election

Tapara unsuccessfully tried to oust Preece a second time in October 2013, only to be defeated by an even wider margin.

2016 Chatham Islands mayoral election

Preece won re-election.

2019 Chatham Islands mayoral election

Alfred Preece did not run for the 2019 mayoral election, allowing Monique Croon to take the mayoralty.

2022 Chatham Islands mayoral election

Croon successfully ran for re-election. Although the election was officially non-partisan,[18] it was analysed within the wider context of polarised public opinion regarding the Sixth Labour Government's Three Waters reform programme. Croon was one of three elected mayors to strongly support Three Waters (in contrast, 6 mayors gave it soft support, 14 were on the fence, 30 gave it soft opposition and 13 gave it strong opposition).[19] After her election victory, Croon gave an interview on Te Ao Māori News.

Notes and References

  1. News: Chatham Islands' mayor resigns . New Zealand Press Agency . . 31 January 2010.
  2. Web site: Owenga Wharf Opened By MP . www.scoop.co.nz . Scoop News . 28 October 2022.
  3. News: Cairns . Lois . Wind of change sweeps South Island . 28 October 2022 . . 10 October 2010 . en.
  4. Le Pla . Ruth . 26 July 2015 . Alfred Preece On just getting things done . NZ Local Government Magazine 1506 . 24–27 . Contrafed Publishing . 29 October 2022.
  5. News: Crean . Mike . Old warrior recalls Maori Battalion heroism . 27 November 2022 . Stuff . 4 December 2012 . en.
  6. News: Last surviving officer of Māori Battalion farewelled on Chatham Islands . en . Newshub . 25 November 2022.
  7. Web site: Davis . Denise . Solomon . Māui . Moriori – The second dawn . teara.govt.nz . Te Ara – the Encyclopedia of New Zealand . 27 November 2022 . en.
  8. Web site: Meet the Team . cic.govt.nz . Chatham Islands Council.
  9. https://gwn.govt.nz/news-resources/sgwn-stories-and-profiles/sgwn-profile-monique-croon/ SGWN Profile: Monique Croon, Government Woman's Network Te Aka Wāhine o Aotearoa
  10. Web site: Your Council . www.cic.govt.nz . Chatham Islands Council . 28 October 2022 . 11 November 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20131111050335/http://www.cic.govt.nz/your-council/ . 11 November 2013.
  11. Web site: Meet the Team . www.cic.govt.nz . Chatham Islands Council . 28 October 2022 . 18 July 2019 . https://web.archive.org/web/20190718020503/https://www.cic.govt.nz/your-council/meet-the-team/ . 18 July 2019.
  12. Web site: Meet the Team . cic.govt.nz . Chatham Islands Council . 28 October 2022 . 14 January 2020 . https://web.archive.org/web/20200114063050/https://cic.govt.nz/your-council/meet-the-team/ . 14 January 2020.
  13. Web site: Quickfire questions with the Councillors: Greg Horler (Deputy Mayor) . www.cic.govt.nz . Chatham Islands Council . 28 October 2022.
  14. Web site: Local Electoral Act 2001 . 18 September 2013 . Parliamentary Counsel Office.
  15. https://www.horizons.govt.nz/HRC/media/Media/Agenda-Reports/Regional-Council-Meeting-2014-27-05/1494AnnexA.pdf
  16. https://www.cic.govt.nz/assets/CIC/Documents/CIC-Local-Governance-Statement-2014.pdf
  17. Web site: 9 October 2010 . Comfortable victory for Chathams mayor . 25 November 2022 . RNZ . en-nz.
  18. Web site: Monique Croon – Candidate for Mayor of Chatham Islands – Local Elections 2022 . 25 November 2022 . Policy.nz . en.
  19. Web site: Manhire . Toby . 12 October 2022 . Just how big was the ‘change’ vote, and how many mayors hate Three Waters? . 25 November 2022 . The Spinoff.