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2016 Auckland mayoral election

An election was held for the Mayor of Auckland in September and October 2016, closing on 8 October, as part of the 2016 Auckland local government elections. Phil Goff was elected.

Background

Len Brown, previously the Mayor of Manukau City, was elected to two three-year terms as Mayor of Auckland in 2010 and 2013, following the merger of several councils, including Manukau City Council, to form Auckland Council in 2010. He did not stand in 2016.

Candidates

  • Mario Alupis.
  • Aileen Austin (Independent).
  • Penny Bright (Independent), activist and 2013 mayoral candidate.
  • Patrick Brown (Communist League).
  • Tricia Cheel (STOP).
  • Victoria Crone (Independent), New Zealand managing director of Xero; announced candidacy on 14 December 2015.
  • Phil Goff (Independent), Labour MP for Mount Roskill; announced candidacy on 22 November 2015.
  • David Hay (Independent), former Green parliamentary candidate for Rodney and Epsom and former policy analyst for Manukau City and Auckland Council; announced candidacy on 20 November 2015.
  • Alezix Heneti.
  • Adam Holland (Auckland Legalise Cannabis), perennial candidate
  • Susanna Kruger
  • Stan Martin (Independent).
  • Bin Thanh Nguyen (Independent).
  • Phil O'Conner (Christians Against Abortion).
  • John Palino (Independent), entrepreneur and 2013 mayoral runner-up; confirmed candidacy on 29 February 2016.
  • Tyrone Raumati (Greater Auckland), West Auckland based community leader.
  • Chlöe Swarbrick (Independent), University of Auckland double graduate, journalist, and entrepreneur; announced candidacy on 4 July 2016.
  • Mark Thomas (Independent), deputy chair of the Ōrākei Local Board; announced candidacy on 24 September 2015. During September he asked to withdraw from the race, conceding that it was "inevitable" that Phil Goff would win the election. Although he could not be removed from the ballot papers, Thomas refocused his campaign on Goff.
  • Wayne Young.

Prospective candidates who did not stand

Debates

A debate held on 15 February was attended by Goff, Crone, Bright, Thomas, Berry and Hay. Goff promoted the public-private partnership construction of a light rail network in Auckland, while Berry described the idea as fiscally irresponsible and out of date. Maria Slade of Stuff.co.nz opined the debate outcome as a victory for Goff.

Goff, Crone and Thomas participated in a 17 June debate, in which traffic congestion was discussed, and Goff lamented the late commitment to the City Rail Link as an example of poor investment in public infrastructure. A debate was scheduled for 8 September at the University of Auckland's School of Architecture and Planning, to be chaired by journalist Rod Oram.

Opinion polling

Results

By local board

Source:

See also

Notes

References