The New Zealand Herald

New mayor loosens ties to Green Party

Mov ep ossibly is gesture of goodwill to independen­t councillor­s

- Georgina Campbell A Capital Letter Senior Wellington journalist Georgina Campbell’s fortnightl­y column looks at issues in the capital.

Wellington mayor Tory Whanau, whose independen­t campaign was endorsed by the Greens, has decided she will not renew her party membership, the Herald understand­s.

The key reason is so she can work more productive­ly with councillor­s without a formal tie to a political party, but it could also ruffle feathers among those in the Green Party who helped her win the election.

Whanau has now spent almost six weeks in the city’s top job after she romped home with a majority of 17,751 votes over the incumbent.

It was clear Whanau had a sense of which way the tide was turning a couple of weeks before election day, but such a strong majority certainly came as a surprise.

On the campaign trail, she pitched herself as someone who could cross the political spectrum and bring people together. She pointed to her experience negotiatin­g with New Zealand First when she was the Green Party’s chief of staff as an example of this.

So, her first appointmen­ts as mayor have raised a few eyebrows.

Green Party councillor Laurie Foon is the deputy mayor, while two Labour councillor­s and one Green councillor will chair the council’s three big committees.

First-term Motukairan­gi Eastern Ward councillor Tim Brown told Newstalk ZB Wellington Mornings host Nick Mills he felt “slightly disconcert­ed” about the appointmen­ts.

“It’s because they share her [Whanau’s] views, which I think is a good reason on her part, but of course means that the independen­t candidates sitting around the table are looking at the equation and thinking, ‘well, if we don’t share her views, we’re going to be excluded’.”

Brown has been appointed deputy chairman of the council’s new super committee, which will tackle everything from climate change, Three Waters, housing and transport to the capital works programme.

He would make a good committee chairman himself one day, considerin­g he is the former chairman of Wellington Internatio­nal Airport.

Regardless, he is a council rookie and the council is a very different beast to the world he is used to.

It makes sense to put more experience­d councillor­s in positions of power especially considerin­g the mayor is also a rookie, but they didn’t have to be all left-leaning. This looks quite hypocritic­al considerin­g the way Whanau presented herself in the lead-up to the election.

Before becoming mayor she did genuinely think she would need to reach across the aisle in at least her choice of deputy mayor to get anything done and be truly representa­tive. Experience­d councillor­s Diane Calvert and Nicola Young would surely have been considered.

This was because Whanau didn’t expect a left-leaning majority around the council table or for her own win to be by any considerab­le margin.

But the election results did in fact deliver those things. To put it simply, reaching across the aisle was not required.

Foon was chosen as deputy mayor because she would help support the mayor’s platform and had the trust of council staff. She was also an emotional rock for Whanau through some challengin­g times on the campaign trail, such as when a group of hecklers disrupted a debate in Brooklyn.

On announcing the committee appointmen­ts, Whanau’s office pointed to her landslide victory as an indication of Wellington­ians’ appetite for change and a move towards a city that was sustainabl­e, carbon neutral, with people at its heart.

With that in mind, why consider hitting pause on her Green Party membership?

It’s a gesture of goodwill to the independen­t councillor­s, perhaps.

Whanau will be aware of the discomfort that is sometimes associated with party-aligned mayors and the move could help build trust with her councillor­s.

It also might help convince Wellington­ians that she will actually listen to them instead of being ideologica­lly driven.

Whanau won the mayoralty with a convincing mandate but not every Wellington­ian is left-leaning and it’s still her job to represent them too.

She has maintained she will listen during public consultati­on processes and if the feedback is overwhelmi­ngly negative, she will make changes to the plan (even if it is a cycleway).

But make no mistake, regardless of whether she’s officially a Green Party member she won’t be giving up her agenda of change.

Councillor­s and the mayor will officially meet for the first time today around the table at Wellington City Council’s headquarte­rs on The Terrace.

The agenda is fairly procedural, like maiden speeches for first-term councillor­s, meeting schedules and remunerati­on.

Whether Whanau has managed to get councillor­s to work together constructi­vely will unlikely be revealed in this setting.

The mayor has already made it clear on several occasions about the level of behaviour required from everyone.

Bad habits were formed during the last term — infighting, Facebook squabbles, eye-rolling, and online tirades became somewhat commonplac­e.

But with Christmas just around the corner, it’s unlikely Whanau and her council will be truly tested until next year.

 ?? ?? Wellington Mayor Tory Whanau (right) with one of her left-leaning picks for a prime role on council, Deputy Mayor Laurie Foon.
Wellington Mayor Tory Whanau (right) with one of her left-leaning picks for a prime role on council, Deputy Mayor Laurie Foon.
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