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Mayor of Auckland

Head of the Auckland Council


Head of the Auckland Council

FieldValue
postMayor
bodyAuckland
imageWayne Brown 2024 (cropped).jpg
incumbentWayne Brown
incumbentsince28 October 2022
inauguralLen Brown
styleHis Worship
typeCouncil leader
departmentAuckland Council
member_ofAuckland Council
seatAuckland Town Hall
termlengthThree years, renewable
appointerElectorate of Auckland
formation1 November 2010
salary$269,500 p.a.
websiteOfficial website
deputyDesley Simpson

The mayor of Auckland is the elected head of local government in the Auckland Region of New Zealand's North Island; one of 67 mayors in the country. The principal city of the region is Auckland. The mayor presides over the Auckland Council and is directly elected using the first-past-the-post method.

The position has existed since 2010 when the previously existing authorities in the region were merged into one region-wide authority.

Background

The position was first filled by election on 9 October 2010 for the establishment of the Auckland Council on 1 November 2010. The Council replaced seven territorial authority councils, including the Auckland City Council, and also the Auckland Regional Council. Before 2010, "Mayor of Auckland" was an informal term applied to the Mayor of Auckland City, head of the Auckland City Council.

Until October 2013, when new mayoral powers set out in the Local Government Act 2002 Amendment Act 2012 came into effect, the Mayor of Auckland had more powers compared to other mayors in New Zealand.

Role of mayor

The mayor has the powers to establish their own office, create and dissolve governing body committees and appoint the chairpersons of the council's committees. The mayor chairs the governing body and may exercise a casting vote if a tie arises during a vote.

History of mayoral contests

During the first mayoral election for Auckland Council in 2010, outgoing Mayor of Manukau City Len Brown was elected, defeating outgoing Mayor of Auckland City John Banks, outgoing Mayor of North Shore City Andrew Williams and prominent Christian businessman Colin Craig, amongst others. The mayoral office had a budget of $4.1 million and a staff of 18 in 2011. Brown preferred not to use the honorific "His Worship".

Contenders in the 2013 Auckland mayoral election included Brown, John Minto and John Palino. Brown was re-elected.

Brown announced in November 2015 that he would not contest the 2016 mayoral election. There were 19 contenders for the position, and Phil Goff won with 49% of the vote, against Victoria Crone, John Palino, and Chlöe Swarbrick.

In the 2019 mayoral election, Goff won re-election against 21 contenders with 49% of the vote. Other contenders who received a high share of the vote include John Tamihere (22%), Craig Lord (8%), John Hong (4%) and Ted Johnston (4%).

In February 2022, Goff announced he would not stand in the October 2022 mayoral election. The election was won by Wayne Brown, with 45% of the vote.

List of mayors

#NamePortraitElectionsEntered officeLeft officeDeputy
1Len Brown[[File:Len Brown.jpg60px]]14 October 2016Penny Hulse
2Phil Goff[[File:Phil Goff 2017 (cropped).jpg60px]]15 October 2022Bill Cashmore
3Wayne Brown[[File:Wayne Brown 2024 (cropped).jpg60px]]{{hlist20222025}}16 October 2022Incumbent

Role of deputy mayor

The deputy mayor is the second highest elected official in the Auckland Council. The deputy mayor acts in support of the Mayor of Auckland. It is the second highest elected position in the council. However, like the position of Deputy Prime Minister, this seniority does not necessarily translate into power. They are appointed by the mayor from the elected ward councillors. The current deputy mayor is Desley Simpson, who represents the Ōrākei ward on the Auckland Council. Simpson was selected to be deputy by incoming mayor Wayne Brown.

Beyond committees of the whole council, the deputy mayor is an ex-officio member of the following Auckland Council committees:

  • Performance and Appointments Committee
  • Audit and Risk Committee
  • Civil Defence & Emergency Management Committee
  • Community Development and Safety Committee
  • Council-Controlled Organisation Direction and Oversight Committee
  • Expenditure Control and Procurement Committee
  • Regulatory and Safety Committee
  • Auckland Domain Committee Like any other councillor, the deputy mayor may be appointed to additional committees which the mayor wishes to appoint them to.

List of deputy mayors

MayorDeputy mayorWard representedAffiliationAssumed officeLeft office
1Len Brown1Penny HulseWaitākere WardIndependent
West at Heart
2Phil Goff2Bill CashmoreFranklin WardTeam Franklin
3Wayne Brown3Desley SimpsonŌrākei wardCommunities & Residents

References

References

  1. "Local Government Elected Members (2016/17) (Auckland Council and Local Boards) Determination 2016".
  2. "Better Local Government Fact Sheet".
  3. (28 May 2015). "Auckland Council: Standing Orders of the Governing Body".
  4. Orsman, Bernard. (9 February 2011). "Council's Maori board to cost $3.4m". [[The New Zealand Herald]].
  5. "Meet your mayor". Auckland Council.
  6. Whiteacre, Charlotte. (16 April 2013). "John Minto for Auckland mayor?". [[Newshub.
  7. (8 November 2015). "Auckland mayor Len Brown will not stand again". Auckland Now.
  8. (15 September 2016). "Compare the policies of Auckland's mayoral candidates". [[Radio New Zealand]].
  9. (14 September 2016). "Goff 27% ahead of nearest Mayoral rival". Horizon Research.
  10. "2019 local electionsfinal results – Mayor, ward councillors, local board members".
  11. (14 February 2022). "Auckland mayoralty: Phil Goff stepping down at end of term, retiring from politics". [[Stuff.co.nz]].
  12. (2022). "Mayor official results".
  13. "Role of the mayor".
  14. (27 October 2022). "Desley Simpson announced as new Auckland deputy mayor".
  15. "Committee members and contacts".
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