1989 Christchurch mayoral election

New Zealand mayoral election From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1989 Christchurch mayoral election was part of the New Zealand local elections held that same year. In 1989, election were held for the mayor of Christchurch plus other local government positions. The polling was conducted using the standard first-past-the-post voting method.

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1989 Christchurch mayoral election

 1986
14 October 1989
1992 
Turnout121,680 (60.56%)
 
Candidate Vicki Buck Morgan Fahey Margaret Murray
Party Independent United Citizens Christchurch Action
Popular vote 63,824 30,891 25,666
Percentage 52.45 25.39 21.09

Results by ward

Mayor before election

Hamish Hay
Christchurch Citizens' Association

Elected mayor

Vicki Buck
Independent

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Background

Incumbent mayor Hamish Hay had first entered the city council in 1959 and has had continuous service since then. For the last five terms, he had been mayor, and he had announced his mayoral candidacy in October 1988. Less than two months out from the election, he pulled out of the contest due to ill health.[1][2]

There was deadlock on the city council with a four-way split in its membership. The Labour Party won a plurality of seats with seven seats, the United Citizens won seven, the new Christchurch Action ticket with six seats and the remaining three seats won by independent candidates. Prior to the election there was a schism on the right wing Citizens' Association resulting in two conservative tickets running against each other.[3] Christchurch Action was set up, comprising former councillors from districts that merged with the city as part of the 1989 local government reforms.[4]

Results

Hay was succeeded by Labour Party councillor Vicki Buck who became Christchurch's first female mayor.[5]

The following table gives the election results:

More information Party, Candidate ...
1989 Christchurch mayoral election[6][7][8][9]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Vicki Buck 63,824 52.45
United Citizens Morgan Fahey 30,891 25.39
Christchurch Action Margaret Murray 25,666 21.09
McGillicuddy Serious Craig Young 899 0.74
Economic Euthenics Tubby Hansen 400 0.33 −1.72
Informal votes 1341 1.09 −0.32
Majority 32,933 27.07
Turnout 121,680 60.56 +2.56 approx
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Results by ward

Vicki Buck polled highest in all but one of the Christchurch Wards, Margaret Murray won her own Waimairi ward, while Fahey did not get a plurality in any ward, his highest polling ward being Heathcote.[10] Polling by The Star suggested Buck would dominate a majority of the wards although the opposing candidates disputed the figures during the campaign. [11][12]

More information Vicki Buck, Morgan Fahey ...
Vicki Buck Morgan Fahey Margaret Murray Others Total
Ward # % # % # % # % #
Burwood 5,885 58.80 2,269 22.67 1,782 17.80 73 0.73 10,009
Fendalton 4,884 41.99 3,546 30.49 3,126 26.88 75 0.64 11,631
Ferrymead 6,057 57.97 2,885 27.61 1,363 13.05 143 0.68 10,488
Hagley 4,382 59.14 1,906 25.27 980 13.23 142 1.92 7,410
Heathcote 5,771 53.78 3,308 30.83 1,526 14.22 125 1.16 10,730
Papanui 5,175 47.09 2,319 21.10 3,378 30.74 118 1.07 10,990
Pegasus 6,114 64.27 2,190 23.02 1,094 11.50 115 1.21 9,513
Riccarton 4,624 44.21 2,518 24.07 3,194 30.54 124 1.19 10,460
Shirley 5,307 55.89 2,861 30.13 1,239 13.05 118 0.94 9,496
Spreydon 5,399 56.56 2,772 29.04 1,269 13.29 105 1.10 9,545
Waimairi 4,446 38.56 2,093 18.15 4,916 42.64 74 0.64 11,529
Wigram 4,981 57.94 1,995 25.39 1,520 17.68 101 1.17 8,597
Total 63,824 52.45 30,891 25.39 25,666 21.09 1,299 1.07 121,680
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City council election result

More information Ward, Party ...
Christchurch city councillors elected
Ward Party Elected
Burwood Independent Carole Evans*
Independent Mike Stevens
Fendalton United Citizens Ron Wright*
Action Philip Carter
Ferrymead United Citizens David Cox*
Labour Charles Manning*
Hagley Labour Linda Constable*
Labour Denis O'Rourke*
Heathcote United Citizens Rex Arbuckle*
Action Oscar Alpers
Papanui Papanui Independent Gordon Freeman
Papanui Independent Des King
Pegasus Labour David Close*
Labour Noala Massey*
Riccarton Action David Buist
Action Derek Anderson
Shirley United Citizens Newton Dodge
United Citizens Dennis Rich*
Spreydon United Citizens Morgan Fahey*
Labour Alex Clark*[a]
Waimairi Action Pat Harrow
Action John Hanafin
Wigram United Citizens Mary Corbett
Labour Ishwar Ganda
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Footnotes: * denotes incumbents

Aftermath

Buck was elected the first ever female mayor of Christchurch, and four women were elected to the council. Margaret Murray and Morgan Fahey both conceded in a friendly manner in person on the night. Fahey, her nearest opponent, became the deputy mayor.

Despite losing the mayoralty, Action performed very well and Citizens' lost its overall majority on council. There was accusation that Action split the centre-right vote and lead to no overall control on the council. Because of the Citizens' animosity towards the action team Labour and Citizens' formed an alliance on the council which resulted in Action missing out on a fair share of committee chairmanships.[5][14]

Dennis Rich retained his position as team leader after the election, but Labour's team leader Alex Clark was replaced by Pegasus councillor David Close after Clark expressed a preference to focus on his regional council seat. Clark was also unable to secure a committee chairmanship, even in transport, despite his advocacy for a city owned bus company.[14]

Although Labour candidate Arthur Adcock had won on election night by a margin of 19 votes, independent Mike Stevens refused to concede and sought multiple rounds of recounts, eventually resulting in Adcock losing his seat to Stevens.[15] This meant Labour's election night plurality of seats was also lost. There was also legal action in the Papanui ward over the nature of election material.[16]

Mayor Buck initially tried to get councillors to sit in alphabetical order next to each other, however, councillors ended up moving their own name plates around to sit in party/team blocs.[17]

Notes

  1. Clark was elected on a Labour Party ticket, but resigned from the party within a week of the election and became an independent.[13]

References

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