The New Zealand Herald

Dancing Goff picks a tight battle

- Bernard Orsman Super City

Auckland Mayor Phil Goff has told supporters it may be a tight race to win a second term. month out from postal voting papers hitting letterboxe­s, Goff spent an unusual amount of time at his campaign launch attacking main rival John Tamihere, who believes the tide has turned in his favour.

After showing off his dance skills at the Diversity Centre in Papatoetoe yesterday — Goff danced to a song sung by Samoan girl Pearl Pita, 10 — the mayor said voters had a choice.

They could choose between an inclusive, progressiv­e and worldclass city and a Tamihere mayoralty

that would set Auckland back.

He addressed about 120 supporters that included six Labour MPs and left-leaning councillor­s. Deputy Mayor Bill Cashmore, a National Party member, also attended.

Goff later told journalist­s he had no polling informatio­n to suggest he was in trouble but referred to the collapse of other candidates on the right. Last week, John Palino left the mayoral contest and endorsed Tamihere.

“I regard Tamihere as being an on-the-right candidate. Everything he says about privatisat­ion would suggest that. I think you may see a consolidat­ion of votes there and I’m not complacent about this.

“I think you have to anticipate this will be a close race and this is how we are treating it,” said Goff.

At the 2016 election, Goff thrashed the centre-right candidate, Vic Crone, by 187,622 votes to 111,731 votes. Tamihere told the Herald a “lightning rod has happened and a switch gone on” in the past two weeks and he was confident of sweeping to power when postal voting closed on October 12.

“A Tamihere mayoralty will set Auckland back; my next term will take Auckland forward,” Goff said.

After making transport, housing and improving democracy his big goals in 2016, Goff prioritise­d clean transport, the environmen­t and climate change for a second term. Among his promises are for council to buy only electric or hybrid vehicles from next year, speeding up the move from diesel to electric buses and extending the Government’s rebate for low emission vehicles to help pay for electric buses. Working with Government to achieve lower emissions targets, Goff wants a third of cars to be electric before 2030, raise emission standards on new cars to levels set in Japan in 2014 and improve car occupancy from the average current level of 1.5 to 2 by 2030.

Goff also promised to make a start on electrifyi­ng the rail line from Papakura to Pukekohe within two years.

“My opponent is stuck in the past, and has no answers for the congestion, pollution and climate-change challenges . . . Spending more time in traffic jams while our city chokes on petrol fumes is not the future Aucklander­s want, but that will be the result if my opponent is elected.”

Goff, who introduced new rates for water and the environmen­t, an 11.5 cents a litre regional petrol tax and a bed tax in his first term, said he had no plans for any new rates or taxes in his second term.

 ?? Photo / Jason Oxenham ?? Phil Goff embraces a supporter at the launch of his campaign in Papatoetoe.
Photo / Jason Oxenham Phil Goff embraces a supporter at the launch of his campaign in Papatoetoe.

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