- Wellington Mayor Tory Whanau will not seek a second term and will run for the Greens in the city鈥檚 M膩ori ward.
- Whanau鈥檚 decision was influenced by the Golden Mile project and Andrew Little entering the mayoral race.
- She aims to focus on working with mana whenua and fighting for what she believes.
Wellington Mayor Tory Whanau has decided not to seek a second term, reversing her previous decision to run again for the mayoralty at the local body elections in October.
She had previously said she was keen to serve three terms and had received the Green Party endorsement for the mayoralty. Instead, she will now run for the Greens in the city鈥檚 M膩ori ward.
Speaking to the Herald, Whanau said two events helped change her mind.
On Monday, she turned the first sod on the Courtenay Place section of the redevelopment of the city鈥檚 鈥淕olden Mile鈥 鈥 a project that has been kicking around since 2016. The second event was the decision of former Labour leader Andrew Little to throw his hat in the ring earlier this month.
鈥淲ith that [the Golden Mile] aside, and now having Andrew Little in the race, I鈥檝e decided I鈥檇 like to step aside to give him a clear runway to win the mayoralty,鈥 Whanau said.
鈥淚 think this is actually a better outcome for everyone involved, certainly for the city. I can keep fighting for what I believe in for the city, but most importantly, I can work with mana whenua. I can serve my people,鈥 she said.
Little paid tribute to Whanau saying, 鈥淚 want to acknowledge Tory Whanau for her service to Wellington. Tory took on the mayoralty during a tough time for Wellington and regardless of our differences in approach I want to recognise her hard work and her dedication to the city鈥.
Tory Whanau pictured shortly after winning the mayoralty. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Whanau, who is the city鈥檚 first mayor of M膩ori descent, publicly hinted she might not seek a second term at the end of last year, telling Newstalk ob体育接口 she鈥檇 be having 鈥渃onversations with family and friends鈥 about her next steps.
鈥淥ver the summer, there were no viable candidates running for the mayoralty, so I thought, well, you know what, I will do that. I will put myself forward, because I still care about the outcomes of the city,鈥 Whanau said.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 want this mayoral campaign to be about Labour versus Green, progressive versus progressive. That鈥檚 not what it should be about. In fact, we ought to be coming together and working as a team to deliver the best outcomes for our city, and I know that we can do that."
Whanau told Little about her plans last week.
鈥淗e was very gracious, very friendly,鈥 Whanau said.
Little told Newstalk ob体育接口鈥檚 Ryan Bridge this morning that that conversation with Whanau was a brief one.
鈥淚 wished her all the best and that was really it,鈥 Little said.
Little said Whanau took on the mayoralty at a 鈥渃hallenging time鈥 but she had made some positive changes.
The former Labour leader said one of the main reasons he stepped up to be a candidate was so he could restore the faith in the council.
鈥淭here, there鈥檚 not, it is simply not acceptable for rates to increase, by my calculation, about 30% in the last two years,鈥 Little said.
鈥淎 lot of that is, I think, council not getting a grip on their own finances.鈥
鈥楢 dramatic couple of years鈥
Whanau won the mayoralty in 2022, beating Labour鈥檚 Paul Eagle and incumbent Wellington Mayor Andy Foster in the closest thing to a landslide possible under Wellington鈥檚 STV voting system.
Looking back, Whanau is proud to have lifted the city鈥檚 water investment to $1.8 billion in the 2024-34 Long-Term Plan.
The council鈥檚 district plan will enable thousands of new homes. The council has also planned to upgrade over 800 social housing units.
It has built 27km of new cycleways and bus priority lanes have doubled from 4km to 8km.
鈥淚鈥檓 really proud of that ... that is exactly what I was elected to deliver and now with the Golden Mile project starting officially I feel very proud. We鈥檙e, we鈥檙e in the middle of transformation,鈥 Whanau said.
Projects like the Golden Mile had been 鈥渁 battle鈥, but one that was ultimately worth fighting.
When asked how her mayoralty might be remembered, Whanau admitted there was 鈥渁 lot of negativity鈥 around her now, but she believed Wellingtonians will look back fondly on the transformation the city has undergone.
She thinks part of the negativity is due to the fact that great swathes of town are closed for earthquake strengthening, including the central library and the Town Hall.
鈥淲e鈥檙e a city in transition,鈥 Whanau said.
鈥淚 like to try and remind people that if you see road cones, if you see construction happening, that is progress. That means something is going to be delivered.鈥
Tory Whanau pictured last year. Photo / Mark Mitchell
鈥淥ur city in 20 years鈥 time, even in five years鈥 time, it鈥檚 going to be quite different. We鈥檒l be on top of our leaks, we鈥檒l have Courtenay Place finished 鈥 it鈥檒l be the best entertainment precinct, the [central] library will be open, the Town Hall will be open, Civic Square will be open, and we鈥檒l have a new waste minimisation plant," she said.
鈥淚 can understand the frustration that people have, but this is what change is.鈥
Whanau admitted that she personally had become a 鈥渄istraction鈥 鈥 one that threatened to undermine what she wanted to achieve.
鈥淚鈥檓 glad that I鈥檓 no longer going to be a distraction to some of that,鈥 she said.
鈥淭hat kind of helped me decide this pathway ... It鈥檚 not about me. I鈥檇 rather just put myself aside and keep focusing on the work,鈥 she said.
When asked what she might have done differently, Whanau said she would have sought to spend some time on council before becoming Mayor.
Would not back airport sale again
Whanau鈥檚 mayoralty changed after she backed a proposal to sell the council鈥檚 stake in Wellington airport to capitalise a fund that would compensate for the council鈥檚 $2.6b under-insurance problem.
Council officers recommended diversifying the council鈥檚 investments, rather than having them concentrated in the airport (which would itself be vulnerable to Wellington earthquakes).
But the debate turned sour, pitting Whanau against her Labour allies around the council table and even some Greens.
鈥淚t got quite ugly, and I think we weren鈥檛 being the best versions of ourselves,鈥 Whanau said.
鈥淚n hindsight, when I look at that particular project and maybe Reading [Whanau backed a deal to revitalise the privately-owned cinema complex], I may not have been quite as supportive if I trusted my instincts.鈥
Whanau said after those twin challenges 鈥 both proposals eventually fell through 鈥 she learned to trust her instincts.
鈥淚t was actually directly after the airport decision where I really started to trust myself more,鈥 she said.
While she pledged not to support a sale of the airport shares in future, she says the problem the sale was trying to address still exists.
The council is up against the wall financially and it has an under-insurance risk 鈥 a risk that has a good chance of turning into a real problem; the latest modelling reckons there is a one-in-10 chance of Wellington being hit by a significant earthquake in the next 50 years.
鈥淲e did have a very serious challenge, and we still do, of under-insurance ... it seemed like a logical way to address that, but it鈥檚 not what the people wanted,鈥 Whanau said.
A proposal to sell the council's stake in Wellington airport ultimately failed. Photo / Mark Mitchell
The sale put severe strain on the council鈥檚 relationship with mana whenua, which Whanau 鈥渁bsolutely鈥 hoped to repair if elected as the M膩ori ward councillor.
鈥淧olitics is dramatic and it鈥檚 hard and sometimes relationships become a bit fractured, but that鈥檚 because the decisions that we鈥檙e making are really hard and people care about them.
鈥淚t鈥檚 okay to have those disagreements, the rebuild, however, is much more important.鈥
Personal struggles
Whanau was dogged by personal struggles while mayor. After two high-profile incidents, Whanau admitted to a drinking problem.
Last year, she was also diagnosed with ADHD.
Whanau said her generation of politicians was 鈥渕ore open鈥 about challenges than generations that had gone before.
鈥淚 suppose the personal challenges that I鈥檝e faced are probably not dissimilar to what many people have faced, whether it鈥檚 needing to reduce drinking or getting an ADHD assessment or just wanting to be a bit more private,鈥 she said.
鈥淭hese are the issues that my generation are facing 鈥 Millennials, Gen Z, we鈥檙e all very open.鈥
Reflecting on 10 years in politics (she began working for the Green Party as a staffer a decade ago), Whanau noticed an increase in abuse copped by local and central government politicians.
She thought the turning point was the pandemic and the subsequent restrictions.
鈥淚 think it was the Covid lockdown that really accelerated that behaviour,鈥 Whanau said.
She thought that while politicians copped abuse before Covid, the rhetoric has become far more violent since.
鈥淰iolence has definitely increased post-Covid ... decorum has been lost. People, mainly men, are very happy to say the most hideous things about women in politics, which have nothing to do with their character,鈥 Whanau said.
She said she was 鈥渓ooking forward to being less of a target鈥 of that kind of behaviour, but it was not enough to make her quit politics altogether 鈥 in fact, Whanau said one day she would consider running for Parliament.
鈥淚 love people, so it鈥檚 a natural pathway for me to go to Parliament and become a minister, but that鈥檚 a long way away,鈥 Whanau said.
鈥淚 still want to keep going, I still have plenty in me to keep going,鈥 she said.
Thomas Coughlan is the NZ Herald political editor and covers politics from Parliament. He has worked for the Herald since 2021 and has worked in the Press Gallery since 2018.
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