New Zealand Woman’s Weekly

ARISE, SIR TIM!

Honour for Invercargi­ll’s mayor

- Lynley Ward

It might come as a surprise to learn that for once in his life, Sir Timothy Richard Shadbolt was actually left speechless the moment he learned he had been made a knight in the 2019 New Year Honours list.

“It was stunned silence,” confesses the normally talkative Invercargi­ll mayor. “I’ve had a colourful past and I didn’t think I would fit into their criteria.”

But given the decades devoted to local government – at 71, he’s New Zealand’s longest serving mayor, with a remarkable 10 terms in two different cities over four decades – Sir Tim’s bursting with pride at the being handed the title.

“I’ve joined a very special club – I feel very privileged and lucky,” he says, adding he’s been inundated with messages of congratula­tions including from fellow knights Sir Don McKinnon and Mad Butcher

Sir Peter Leitch.

And while he admits to having republican leanings in his 20s, he’s a little astonished he hasn’t come in for some flak from his old university friends.

“They seem to be very pleased for me, which I found very surprising. I thought I would have at least one ring up and call me a traitor!”

But over the decades, Tim has shifted to embrace the monarchy. “This issue came up when Sir John Key wanted to change the flag,” he explains. “Much to the surprise of my fellow former radicals, I defended the monarch on the basis that every country I’ve been to, you’ve got to have one leader. In New Zealand, our leader is the Queen, and the police, army and JPs have to swear allegiance to her. It seems oldfashion­ed, but if you’re going to have one el supreme leader, I’d prefer it to be someone who has

got there by an

accident of birth rather than someone who actually wants to be the el supreme leader.

“Generally speaking, I think the Queen’s done a good job, so there wasn’t any issue there for me in terms of ideologica­l positionin­g.”

Eyeing his ninth tilt at leading the southernmo­st city, where he lives with youngest son Declan and partner Asha Dutt, Tim recalls the moment he was spurred into action back in 1983.

“In a Titirangi by-election, voting had dropped down to 12%. My father was a pilot in the Fleet Air Arm and killed in a training flight for Korea. I felt it was almost an insult to only get 12% of people bothering to vote, so I promised the people of Waitemata City I would tow my concrete mixer behind the mayoral car if I was elected. And because the councillor­s didn’t have a sense of humour, they passed a bylaw making it illegal to put a tow bar on the mayoral car. It seems frivolous, but it won me the election in a way.”

He famously made good on his promise, reversing the bylaw and towing his concrete mixer, dubbed Karl Marx, behind the regal eight-seater Daimler many times. “I think people enjoyed the symbolism of a rusty old mixer being towed by this ostentatio­us Daimler that we’d got from the British High Commission in London,” he chuckles.

Earning his honour for services to local government and the community, he cites

an unconventi­onal initiative to attract students to Invercargi­ll’s Southern Institute of Technology as his greatest achievemen­t to date.

“Councils aren’t supposed to get involved in education, but I just felt the zero fees scheme was such a groundbrea­king project and it’s worked out so well. We went from 1000 to 5000 students with our population, which was the fastest declining city in Australasi­a, and turned it around!“

There’s even a silver lining to what he considers his worst mistake in local government. Grandiose plans to extend the city’s airport runway and turn Invercargi­ll into a trans-Tasman travel hub ended up costing him the 1994 mayoral race. Two decades on, that $7m investment is about to come into its own with carriers considerin­g flying jets between Auckland and Invercargi­ll.

“At least it was only a shortterm failure,” he says. “In the long-term, it’s proven to be quite a strategic asset.”

But it’s his familiarit­y and ambition to inject humanitari­an values into politics that he credits with keeping him in the job since 1983.

“People say, ‘You must have had brilliant policies!’ I say it’s probably more thanks to Dancing with the Stars and Intrepid Journeys. It helps when people feel familiar with you because they’ve seen you on TV or heard you on the radio.”

He also pays tribute to the strong women who made an impression on his life of service, including his aunt Hedda Dyson, former editor of the New Zealand Woman’s Weekly, and Aunt Rene, a nurse in the internatio­nal brigade during the Spanish Civil War.

“There’s been quite a family tradition of doing good things and looking after people,” explains Tim, adding his own mother was a nurse.

And the superannui­tant says there’s plenty more to achieve before he hangs up the mayoral robes. “I’m feeling fit and healthy, I’ve got a six-year-old boy and seven grandchild­ren, and I feel I’ve got the strength to carry on. I’m an old-fashioned Kiwi who hopes to bring a bit of excitement and joy to local government and New Zealand as a whole.”

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Right: On the red carpet with partner Asha and (far right) on holiday in Te Anauwith son Declan.
Right: On the red carpet with partner Asha and (far right) on holiday in Te Anauwith son Declan.
 ??  ?? Stirring up trouble! Tim tows his concrete mixer behind the mayoral Daimler in 1983.
Stirring up trouble! Tim tows his concrete mixer behind the mayoral Daimler in 1983.
 ??  ?? Aye rumba! Strutting his stuff with Dancing with the Stars partnerReb­ecca Nicholson.
Aye rumba! Strutting his stuff with Dancing with the Stars partnerReb­ecca Nicholson.

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