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Wellington's deputy mayor censured after calling member of public a 'nonce'

Author
Ethan Manera ,
Publish Date
Thu, 5 Feb 2026, 1:04pm
Wellington Deputy Mayor Ben McNulty has landed himself in trouble over online mud slinging. Photo / Mark Mitchell
Wellington Deputy Mayor Ben McNulty has landed himself in trouble over online mud slinging. Photo / Mark Mitchell

Wellington's deputy mayor censured after calling member of public a 'nonce'

Author
Ethan Manera ,
Publish Date
Thu, 5 Feb 2026, 1:04pm

Wellington鈥檚 deputy mayor has been censured and forced to apologise over his behaviour online after calling a member of the public a 鈥渘once鈥. 

McNulty, an active social media user, took to X (formerly Twitter) last month over what he described as an 鈥渁bsolutely wild privacy breach鈥 after details of travel arrangements he had made appeared to have fallen into the hands of scammers. 

Another user suggested the issue may have originated with his own email or booking process. 

鈥淲hy throw [the travel site] under the bus before you know what鈥檚 happened? With your lack of critical thinking you have no place in politics,鈥 a user named Mike B commented. 

McNulty responded calling Mike B a nonce, in a comment that has since been deleted. 

Nonce is British slang commonly used to refer to a person who has committed a sexual offence against a child. 

That exchange has led to a Code of Conduct complaint against the deputy mayor, which Mayor Andrew Little has upheld against him. 

The Code of Conduct decision document, seen by the Herald, showed Mike B complained to the council, saying the city鈥檚 deputy mayor had essentially called him a paedophile. 

Mayor Andrew Little agreed that paedophile is an accepted meaning of the word nonce, and found McNulty鈥檚 behaviour 鈥渃onstitutes a failure to remember the respect and dignity of the elected member鈥檚 office when dealing with the public鈥, therefore breaching the council鈥檚 Code of Conduct. 

鈥淚t is also a failure to accord respect to an individual citizen, even if the identity of the citizen is unknown at the time the comment is made,鈥 Little said. 

McNulty said he did not know the full meaning of the term. 

The complainant asked for a public apology, damages, a formal censure from the council, and removal of McNulty from his role of deputy mayor. 

Little ordered McNulty to both publicly and privately apologise for the exchange. 

Yesterday, the deputy mayor apologised on X. 

鈥淚n January, I responded to an anonymous user鈥檚 post by saying they were a nonce. I now know that term has a meaning I did not intend, and using it was offensive. I regret using the term and apologise for doing so,鈥 he said. 

The complaint called for Ben McNulty to be stripped of his deputy mayor role. File photo / Mark MitchellThe complaint called for Ben McNulty to be stripped of his deputy mayor role. File photo / Mark Mitchell 

The mayor found no grounds for damages, arguing the complainant鈥檚 reputation could not be harmed because his full name was not linked to his X account. 

Stripping McNulty of his position as deputy mayor would be 鈥渄isproportionate to the wrong that was done鈥, Little said, and the finding of a breach of the Code of Conduct was formal censure enough. 

Speaking to the Herald this morning, McNulty said it was a 鈥渓earning lesson鈥 and 鈥渃ertainly won鈥檛 happen again鈥. 

鈥淚t was a hostile interaction on Twitter from an anonymous account, I responded with a term that I subsequently learnt has much worse connotations than what I understood it to mean, I鈥檝e emailed the complainant to apologise and put out the statement on Twitter saying that the language was inappropriate and I fully accept that,鈥 he said. 

Asked what he thought the word meant, McNulty said he understood it to be the 鈥渆quivalent to someone that鈥檚 being a bit of a dick鈥. 

When asked whether it was appropriate for the deputy mayor to call a member of the public a dick, McNulty declined to comment further, reiterating his apology. 

Little said McNulty failed to observe the respect and dignity of his office in dealing with the public. Photo / Mark MitchellLittle said McNulty failed to observe the respect and dignity of his office in dealing with the public. Photo / Mark Mitchell 

McNulty, a second-term Labour Party councillor, was named as Little鈥檚 deputy for the first half of the term after he was re-elected to council in October last year with a record number of votes in his Takap奴 Northern ward. 

Little said at the time he was 鈥渋mpressed with Ben鈥檚 grasp of the important issues facing Wellington鈥. 

鈥淚鈥檒l be throwing absolutely everything I鈥檝e got into this role to ensure we build a cohesive team and positive council culture where all voices are heard,鈥 McNulty said at the time. 

Ethan Manera is a Wellington-based journalist covering Wellington issues, local politics and business in the capital. He can be emailed at [email protected]

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