1971 Lower Hutt mayoral election

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1971 Lower Hutt mayoral election

 1968 9 October 1971 1974 
Turnout18,440 (46.15%)
 
Candidate John Kennedy-Good John Seddon Dave Hadley
Party Combined Team Labour Citizens'
Popular vote 6,854 6,337 4,630
Percentage 37.16 34.36 25.10

Mayor before election

John Kennedy-Good

Elected mayor

John Kennedy-Good

The 1971 Lower Hutt mayoral election was part of the New Zealand local elections held that same year. The elections were held for the role of Mayor of Lower Hutt plus other local government positions including fifteen city councillors, also elected triennially. The polling was conducted using the standard first-past-the-post electoral method.

1970 mid-term election

Mayor Percy Dowse died mid-term on 9 December 1970. Rather than hold a by-election the city council members decided to elect a councillor to finish the remainder of the term until the scheduled election 10 months later.[1] The council special meeting was held on 21 December. Councillor Chen Werry was nominated by Wally Bugden and seconded by Jessie Donald but he unexpectedly declined nomination. Cyril Phelps then nominated John Kennedy-Good which was seconded by Harold Meachen and finally the deputy mayor Dave Hadley was nominated by Ted Holdaway and seconded by Don Lee. A vote was held among the councillors by a show of hands. A visible split was seen with Citizens' Association councillors, splitting support between Hadley and Kennedy-Good, with Labour councillors (who were the minority on the council) all voting for Kennedy-Good who won nine votes to six.[2]

A list of each Councillors vote:

Councillor Mayoral Vote
Max Borra Hadley
Wally Bugden Kennedy-Good
Sam Chesney Kennedy-Good
Jessie Donald Kennedy-Good
Stan Frost Hadley
Ted Gibbs Kennedy-Good
Dave Hadley Hadley
Ted Holdaway Hadley
John Kennedy-Good Kennedy-Good
Don Lee Hadley
Harold Meachen Kennedy-Good
Kitty Mildenhall Kennedy-Good
Cyril Phelps Kennedy-Good
Jim Ross Hadley
Chen Werry Kennedy-Good

October 1971 election

Even after councillors elected Kennedy-Good as Dowse's successor the Citizens' Association, who had a majority on the council, did not select Kennedy-Good for the 1971 election. Instead they chose the deputy mayor (and 1968 candidate) Dave Hadley instead. As a result Kennedy-Good formed his own "combined" electoral ticket, consisting of candidates who were previously Citizens' and Labour affiliated, with which to contest the election. Thinking that the Labour Party was not intending to put up a ticket of their own, four Labour councillors joined the combined team. Labour did eventually decide to run its own ticket and party policy dictated that members could not stand for election against official party candidates resulting them having their Labour membership suspended.[1]

In an evenly divided poll Kennedy-Good narrowly edged out former Labour councillor John Seddon to win the mayoralty.[3] The city council was split three ways, with Labour winning a plurality of seats. Labour and Citizens' councillors made a deal to elect their own members to committee chairs and voted Seddon as deputy mayor, sidelining the Combined Team.[1]

At the election both a father and son were elected to the council. Chen Werry was re-elected to the council on the combined ticket while his son, Dick Werry, won a seat on the Labour ticket.[4] It also saw the election of the city's first ever Indian councillor, Govind Bhula, a civil engineer originally from Bombay.[5]

Mayoral results

1971 Lower Hutt mayoral election[6]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Combined Team John Kennedy-Good 6,854 37.16
Labour John Seddon 6,337 34.36
Citizens' Dave Hadley 4,630 25.10 −22.03
Independent Nick Ursin 484 2.62
Informal votes 135 0.73 −0.64
Majority 517 2.80
Turnout 18,440 46.15 +3.14

Councillor results

Notes

References

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