The New Zealand Herald

Do you offer better option on council?

Simon Wilson looks at ways to make Auckland a better city in which to live

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There’s a councillor in Auckland who is so ill, he simply can’t do his job properly. Another who, to judge from the questions asked, understand­s almost nothing from the background papers or the discussion­s that happen right in front of them. A third who always votes no to everything.

Another votes against every budget measure, even when it brings improvemen­ts to his ward, but writes himself up in the local paper as the hero defending local interests. Another is famous for hanging around supermarke­t car parks at election time and pushing people’s trollies to their cars.

Among the local boards, some prioritise their work, make plans, work skilfully with the officers of council, council agencies and utilities, and deliver: new parks, libraries and community centres, roading improvemen­ts, better street lighting, business and employment initiative­s, youth activities, cultural events.

But others don’t even spend their budget. Some are little more than fiefdoms from which petty Pooh-Bahs dispense favours and issue complaints. It’s not just that they’re negative. They’re unambitiou­s for their areas, and ineffectua­l.

How about we get some better politician­s for Auckland? Fancy yourself for the job, or someone you know? There’s a council election in October.

You could stand for the governing body, which is the 20 ward councillor­s and the mayor, but it’s very tough to break through as an outsider. There are organised groupings for these campaigns, backed by the main political parties, and their money and skills invariably prevail.

Your best bet is your local board. It’s a very good bet, actually.

There are 21 boards with several positions on each and the voting numbers are not high. On a local board you can learn a lot, do good things and, if you’re ambitious, prepare yourself to stand for higher office later on.

Or, you can stand for the governing body and local board at the same time, which should help your board campaign because you’ll probably get more media coverage.

Take heart, and lessons, from Chloe Swarbrick. She ran for mayor in 2016 with almost no initial name recognitio­n. She spent only about $1500, but created a profile that kept her in the news and on social media, so she didn’t need ads or billboards. She got 29,000 votes, which was massive.

Tips on how to do it:

1. Learn who’s who.

Most boards contain a mix of wise old heads and boring old farts and you can’t tell the difference just by looking. Get to know them a bit: who will help you, who do you want to align with, and who will you have to knock off?

2. Learn what’s what.

Read the papers and go to their meetings. They’re all advertised, with agendas and background papers, on the Auckland Council website: go to About Auckland Council and then How Auckland Council Works.

You can also ask Democracy Services at council for advice.

3. Get a campaign manager.

A manager will keep you plugged into media and know how to manage electoral rolls, finances, your diary, other team members, electoral law. Find someone who’s done it before, but not a pompous ass stuck on old ways.

4. Get a campaign team.

People to write and design leaflets and posters, and to write media releases, speeches, letters to the papers, Facebook posts. People to knock on doors and to distribute leaflets. People to bring you food.

5. Get a social media manager.

The world is Facebook and Facebook is the world. If you understand what this means, exploit it relentless­ly. If you don’t, find someone who does. They will win you the election if they’re good enough.

6. Knock on doors.

This also wins elections. Voters like meeting candidates and they admire the effort. When you meet a real fan, enrol them in your campaign.

7. Chat up the shopkeeper­s.

Work out how to combine your goals with theirs. Turn them into your promoters.

8. Get among the community.

Market days and fairs, treeplanti­ng and beach cleaning, community group meetings, sports clubs, business groups, parent groups at schools. Work the cake stalls. Be serious about this: if it isn’t your life already, it soon will be.

9. Create a distinct profile and promote it relentless­ly.

The policy statements of most candidates are unfathomab­le blather. Promise something real, deliverabl­e and exciting. Turn it into a slogan and find creative ways to promote it. You want to be the person everyone in your area is talking about. But you’ll never get everyone so don’t worry about the whingers.

10. Raise some money.

Ask supporters for donations; if you hold a meeting, pass round the hat.

11. Be the best version of you.

Each time Chloe Swarbrick did a debate, she knew more than last time. She was analysing her progress and learning on the job.

Voters everywhere are ready for change. The disaffecti­on invites some nasty populism but it should also give hope to people of goodwill and integrity and talent. There’s a city to run and it needs to be done better. Want to be a part of that?

 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? Chloe Swarbrick showed how a newcomer can make a major impression in local body politics. Monday: How to let the past shape the future Tuesday: A dream of fabulous ferries Wednesday: How to get better housing Yesterday: How to get better bike lanesToday: How to get better politician­s Tomorrow: A dream of a new museum
Photo / Mark Mitchell Chloe Swarbrick showed how a newcomer can make a major impression in local body politics. Monday: How to let the past shape the future Tuesday: A dream of fabulous ferries Wednesday: How to get better housing Yesterday: How to get better bike lanesToday: How to get better politician­s Tomorrow: A dream of a new museum

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