Brown beats Collins to be new Auckland mayor

Wayne Brown (right) has beaten Efeso Collins to be the new Mayor of Auckland. Photo: RNZ
Wayne Brown (right) has beaten Efeso Collins to be the new Mayor of Auckland. Photo: RNZ

Businessman Wayne Brown is the new Mayor of Auckland after beating the Labour-endorsed candidate Efeso Collins.

Progress results issued by Auckland Council show Brown has won by 54,000 votes.

"Auckland voters have sent the clearest possible message to Auckland Council, and central government in Wellington, and I promise you that you've been heard," Brown said today.

"There is a mandate for change and my job as Mayor is to lead it.

"It is now up to me, the new governing body and the local boards to act on our mandate, fix what is broken and deliver the change you demand," the incoming mayor said.

Brown said at more than 300 campaign events over the past six months, Aucklanders had made it clear to himself and his rival Collins that people loved the city, but much of it was broken.

He said the number one issue was transport, closely followed by crime, unfinished projects, endless orange cones, rising costs and council waste.

Brown had high praise for Collins, saying he had come to regard his close rival as a friend and would like to work with him over the next three years.

He wasn't so kind to the Government, saying Wellington's job is to listen to what Aucklanders say are the priorities, and to fund them - "not impose ideological schemes, like the $30 billion airport tram, untrammelled housing intensification and Three Waters on a city that doesn't want them".

The 76-year-old thanked his family, campaign team and supporters for all their work and encouragement since he launched his bid for the mayoralty in March, saying he would be taking much of tomorrow off before receiving an economic and financial briefing on Monday by senior council officers.

Brown, a former Far North District Mayor, becomes the third Mayor of Auckland since eight councils were amalgamated to form the Super City in 2010.

Len Brown and Phil Goff each served two terms with the backing of the Labour Party.

Goff stood down this year after successive wins in 2016 and 2019. He is expected to become New Zealand's next High Commissioner to the UK.

Brown emerged as the leading centre-right choice for voters after restaurateur Leo Molloy and Heart of the City chief executive Viv Beck withdrew from the race.

Molloy pulled out just before nominations closed when a poll showed him slipping from second to third place. Beck pulled the pin on the day postal voting started after her campaign went off the rails over revelations of a $353,000 unpaid bill.

Brown has campaigned to "Fix Auckland", promoting himself as the only candidate with the experience and proven track record to sort out the city's finances and infrastructure projects, such as the City Rail Link.

He has promised to cut the staff bill for senior council officers and to stop ratepayer-funding for the council's property arm Eke Panuku Auckland and events and economic arm Auckland Unlimited.

The engineer also has simple solutions in mind, such as installing transponders on buses to trigger green lights to improve travel times and reduce congestion.

Brown has a reputation for being straightforward and, at times, abrasive with people.

Vicki Salmon, who worked with Brown when he was chairman of the Auckland District Health Board when the new Auckland Hospital was built on time and on budget, said Brown is "very upfront, he's got a good brain on him, he can understand very technical issues...and (is) someone who listens to people".

In the last week of the campaign, Brown hit the headlines with an attack on Herald journalist Simon Wilson, saying he would put his picture on urinals and pee on them