Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown has told a prominent lobby group supporter to 鈥渇*** off鈥 after a request for him to sign its 鈥淩atepayer Protection Pledge鈥.
The pledge is an initiative of the Auckland Ratepayers鈥 Alliance (ARA), a group set up by the Taxpayers鈥 Union.
A spokesperson for Brown鈥檚 re-election campaign has called the request a 鈥淧R stunt鈥.
The ARA asked its supporters to write to Brown demanding he sign the pledge, which it claims 鈥渉undreds of incumbent and prospective mayors around New Zealand have done鈥.
Brown received an ARA email with the headline, 鈥淚s Wayne Brown planning a rates blow-out?鈥
He responded with a two-word reply: 鈥淔*** off鈥.
Mayor Wayne Brown's response to the Auckland Ratepayers' Alliance about its "Ratepayer Protection Pledge".
Brown has been on leave today. In relation to his response to the ARA, a spokesperson for his re-election campaign told the Herald that the mayor 鈥渨ished to be unambiguous after being bombarded by their PR stunt emails. Their so-called pledge is unrealistic and meaningless鈥.
Brown 鈥渄irected his expletive at the idea of a rates blow-out鈥, he said.
The response follows comments Brown made in a Herald interview over the weekend, in which he said he had been hearing 鈥渟uch a lot of drivel鈥 on the campaign trail, from candidates and others calling him 鈥渃orrupt鈥.
鈥淚 was just thinking it was really unpleasant,鈥 he said, 鈥渁nd it informs nothing.鈥
He added that the council鈥檚 annual plan was three inches thick and full of information about how and why the council spent its budget.
鈥淓verything you need to know is in there. They just don鈥檛 read it.鈥
The Taxpayers鈥 Union and the ARA have both been asked for comment.
Auckland Mayor Wayne Brown talking to Simon Wilson at the weekend. Photo / Corey Fleming
Rates set to rise by 7.9% next year
Auckland Council鈥檚 residential rates rose by an average 5.8% this financial year, which runs from July to June. Brown has said many times that this is the lowest rates rise of any major city in the country.
In the next financial year, rates are scheduled to rise by a further 7.9%, largely to cover expected costs associated with opening the City Rail Link.
Adopting this rates decision for public consultation in a 2026-27 annual plan will be the first big job of the new council. It will meet in November after being sworn in on October 30, after the postal-ballot election that ends next Saturday.
After next year, according to the 10-year budget contained in the long-term plan, rates rises will fall back to 3.5%. This plan will be refreshed in 2026.
Despite this, Sam Warren of the ARA says, 鈥淲ayne Brown likes to frame himself as a ratepayer hero. He talks the talk, butwon鈥檛 walk the walk ... Unless [he] changes tack, he鈥檒l be delivering the highest-ever rates hike for the Super City. He should be swearing about that.鈥
If Brown is re-elected, his office will be charged with drafting both the new annual plan and the long-term plan, but decisions on the budgets and all other matters in them will be made by the full council.
Brown declined to sign the ARA pledge in 2022, saying at the time that he would keep rates as low as possible but would not be bound by artificial restrictions.
Unelected representatives
Another reason the mayor has previously given for not signing the ARA pledge relates to unelected representatives. The pledge requires its signatories to oppose the presence of unelected people with voting rights on decision-making bodies.
In Auckland, this refers to Houkura, the Independent M膩ori Statutory Board, which was set up by Parliament in 2010.
Houkura has voting members on several council committees, including two on the big policy and planning committee and the transport, resources and infrastructure committee.
Houkura is not represented on the governing body of the council, which is its supreme decision-making body. Auckland Council does not have M膩ori wards.
Brown supports Houkura. In 2023, he abstained on a vote to introduce M膩ori wards.
Simon Wilson is an award-winning senior writer covering politics, the climate crisis, transport, housing, urban design and social issues, with a focus on Auckland. He joined the Herald in 2018.
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