Kapiti Observer

Who is the new Kapiti mayor?

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K Gurunathan talks about going from journalist to mayor of the Kapiti Coast.

Kapiti, that sliver of land between the mountains and the sea, has a new mayor, K Gurunathan.

As a journalist-turned politician, he’s gone from behind the camera to in front of it.

Before the new mayor was sworn in on Tuesday night and received his chains, he talked to the Kapiti Observer about his life before politics, and his life outside politics.

How did you end up getting into the public eye?

In one word, it’s the power of the byline. Being a journalist in the local paper provided a platform for people to know me.

Smaller staff numbers at community papers mean you cover a wide range of local issues, including council politics.

The journalist is at times a social activist. People saw me and my camera at all sorts of events.

In one incident my camera and I became the news. I was trying to take a photo of a police riot squad, dispatched from Wellington, marching down a local road towards an after-party unruly bunch of youths.

An officer turned on me. I was pushed to the ground and handcuffed. A Kapiti cop intervened and saved me. Ahh ... yes, one other point: being berrybrown and bald with Gandhi glasses helps.

What are your interests outside local politics?

Gardening is a passion I share with my wife Claire. Reading current affairs magazines online.

I love watching cooking programmes on TV, my favourites being Rick Stein and Anthony Bourdain. I go to church on Sundays. And I’ve got a keen interest in the Robotics Club I helped initiate at Paraparaum­u College.

Who is your favourite political figure, and why?

It’s Nelson Mandela. The courage and conviction that drove him as a freedom fighter.

And as the world looked on he displayed a spirit of forgivenes­s that helped turn a divided country into a new nation.

You’ve been both a journalist covering politics, and a politician. Whois more important for society, and why?

I recall, every year the Readers Digest did a survey on the most trusted profession­s; both the politician and journalist ended up at the bottom of the heap.

So I suppose you can’t trust either of them to give you a straight answer. But I’ll try.

It’s the journalist, but only if the media the journalist works for exercises its role as the Fourth Estate to hold politician­s to account. But then, what do I know? I’m just a politician.

What was the last book you read, and what did you think of it?

Atul Gawande’s Being Mortal: illness, medicine and what matters in the end. A deeply affecting dissection of dying and the limits of medicine while unfolding the dignity and joy in coming to terms with our mortality.

If you could invite four people, dead or alive, to dinner, who would they be, and why?

It will be a cocktail of Nelson Mandela, the saint, seated next to Robert Mugabe, the beast. Throw in foul-mouth Donald Trump and motor-mouth Brexit Boris. I might break the rules and squeeze a fifth in Winston Peters for local flavour. Why is this a cocktail? Because it’s Saturday night and I want a party.

 ??  ?? New mayor K Gurunathan receives his mayoral chains from Te Atiawa kuia June Davies.
New mayor K Gurunathan receives his mayoral chains from Te Atiawa kuia June Davies.

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