Lester won the election becoming the 35th Mayor of Wellington, Leggett came second and Coughlan third.[1]
Candidates
Wade-Brown decided against standing for a third term as mayor. However, eight other candidates sought her position.[2][3]
Confirmed
Jo Coughlan (Independent)
Coughlan was first elected as Councillor for the Onslow-Western ward in 2007.[4] Previously, Coughlan gave serious consideration to running for Mayor in the 2013 election.[5] Coughlan was chair of the Council Economic Growth and Arts Committee and is a member of other committees, including the Environment and Community, Sports and Recreation Committees. She ran as an independent candidate, but was a press secretary for Sir Don McKinnon (National) while he was serving as the Minister of Foreign Affairs. She is the sister-in-law of then Deputy Prime Minister, Bill English.[4]
Veteran councillor Andy Foster, the council's then Transport and Urban Development Committee Chairman, had served the Wellington City Council for well over two decades. He also sought re-election as a councillor in the Onslow-Western Ward.[9]
Keith Johnson (Independent)
Dr Keith Johnson, an economic policy analyst and blogger from Island Bay,[10] announced his candidacy in April 2016.[11] Johnson ran for the Southern Ward in 2010 with the Labour Party alongside Paul Eagle and in 2013 proposed to stand for mayor.[12] He subsequently withdrew, saying that "There was not much resonance in the concerns I had for debt control and against the rebalancing of rates".[13]
Nick Leggett (Independent)
Leggett had been the mayor of Porirua City since 2010. In March 2016, he announced he would not stand in the next local body elections, hinting at running in the election for mayor in Wellington City.[14] In April, Leggett resigned from the Labour Party and confirmed his intention to stand.[15] Central to his launch campaign speech was a desire to put an end to the "bickering" and "palace politics" holding the Wellington City Council back, resolve transport issues including supporting twin tunnels to the airport, and to facilitate (not fund) a new Sports Museum and Virtual Reality Centre for Wellington.[16]
Lester was first elected as a Wellington City Councillor in 2010.[18] When mayors were given the ability to choose their deputy without involving councillors after the 2013 election, Wade-Brown chose Lester.[2] Lester ran on a Labour Party ticket.[18] He went on to win the election.
Overton announced his candidacy in early August 2016. He is a fringe dwelling guerrilla gardener, artist & political activist.[21] In the 2014 general election he contested the seat of Rongotai for the 'Peoples Revolutionary Front', finishing in last place with 0.12% of the vote.[22]
Helene Ritchie (Independent)
Helene Ritchie announced her candidacy for the mayoralty, her 11th term as councillor, and a position on the District Health Board on the day nominations for local elections opened.[23] Days before the nominations closed, Ritchie opted to campaign only for the mayoralty, withdrawing from all other contests except for the Capital and Coast DHB.[24] She had previously served as Deputy Mayor and leader of the Labour caucus on council.
Nicola Young (Freeze rates and cut waste)
Young was first elected in 2013. She originally stood only for the city council, but then also nominated herself for the mayoralty.[25] Of the six mayoral candidates, she came fourth.[26] Young is an Independent councillor; she formerly stood for the National Party in the 2005 general election in Wellington's Rongotai electorate. Her father was the former cabinet minister Bill Young, and she is the sister of former National list MP Annabel Young.[2][27]
Withdrew
Celia Wade-Brown
Wade-Brown was first elected as a Wellington City Councillor in 1994 and apart from a three-year break served on council until she was elected mayor in the 2010 election.[28] Whilst she has always stood as an independent during her mayoralty, she is generally associated with the Green Party of Aotearoa New Zealand, and The Dominion Post commented that "everything about her shouts 'Green'".[2] On 5 August, Wade-Brown pulled out of the race.[29] Wade-Brown announced her endorsement of Justin Lester as her preferred successor on 2 September.[20]
Opinion polling
Several polls were conducted indicating a tight race with Justin Lester, Jo Coughlan and Nick Leggett polling the strongest.[30]