Sir Tim Shadbolt is in his ninth term as mayor of Invercargill. Photo / Stephen Jaquiery/ODT
Invercargill Mayor Sir Tim Shadbolt is welcoming news Southland Mayor Gary Tong will run for his job at the next election, saying the more the merrier.
Tong made the announcement on Thursday morning after informing Shadbolt of his intentions late last month.
At the last round of elections held in October 2019, Tong said it would be his final as mayor of Southland, after three terms in the job.
But last November he decided he would stand for mayor of Invercargill at the 2022 election.
It would take him almost another year to make the news public, but he said he had good reasons for standing.
“I just felt there needed to be continuity,” Tong said.
“I knew the mayoralty was going to be contested again obviously, and I knew it needed someone to stand who had appropriate connections to central government, and not to blow my own trumpet, but I felt I was the right person to put my name forward.”
His campaign would be centred on giving attention to surrounding areas he believed were neglected, including Bluff and Otatara.
Meanwhile, the news has been well received by long-standing Invercargill Mayor Sir Tim Shadbolt.
Shadbolt, who is in his ninth term as mayor, said it was good of Tong to contact him last month and give a heads-up.
“I think it’s great. My motto is ‘the more the merrier’. It’s one of the advantages we both have, we’re a known name.
“The only similar situation I’ve been in was the folk singer Suzanne Prentice [who ran for mayor in 2010], and a lot of people thought she would roll me … but it didn’t work out.”
Shadbolt has previously been open about multiple candidates playing into his favour by splitting the vote, and acknowledged this situation was no different.
However, he also said he enjoyed having more competitors because it led to a “lively contest”.
“Full of surprises, elections,” he said.
“You just don’t know what people are thinking.”
Shadbolt’s ninth term as mayor of Invercargill has been marked by challenges.
In May, his driver’s licence was suspended. He later revealed he had pulled over on yellow lines after swerving through a roundabout.
In August, he claimed he had been left “traumatised” by workplace bullying during a tumultuous week at council where his emails were intercepted and used against him at a closed meeting.
Tong said the issues facing Shadbolt in the past year were not on his radar.
“I’ve got the greatest respect for Sir Tim and I saw him personally and told him what I was up to.”
Tong lives in Riverton, 40km west of Invercargill, but is not required to move if successful in the next election.
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