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The 1935 Lower Hutt mayoral election was part of the New Zealand local elections held that same year. The elections were held for the role of Mayor of Lower Hutt plus other local government positions including the nine borough councillors, also elected biannually. The polling was conducted using the standard first-past-the-post electoral method.
The election saw the re-election of Jack Andrews, who ran unopposed.
Jack Andrews, the incumbent Mayor sought re-election and retained office by being declared elected unopposed with no other candidates emerging. [1]
The Labour Party put up an official ticket for the election, but chose not to stand a candidate for the mayoralty. It instead decided to put all its resources in to winning a majority on the council, thinking this was the best way to achieve their policies. They were opposed by the politically right-leaning New Zealand Legion. It was the first occasion the Legion had contested an election. The Legion's mayoral candidate (Andrews) was elected unopposed and a majority of Legion candidates were elected to the council. It also had candidates elected to the Wellington Hospital Board, Hutt Valley Electric Power Board and Hutt River Board. Its candidates for the Wellington Harbour Board and Eastbourne Borough Council were all defeated however. The Legion's president, Dr Campbell Begg, said he was pleased with the results. [2]
Party | Candidate | Votes | % | ±% | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Legion | Murdoch Macaskill | 2,176 | 64.55 | ||
Legion | Charles James Ashton | 1,912 | 56.71 | +5.86 | |
Legion | John Mitchell | 1,904 | 56.48 | +9.37 | |
Legion | Wilfred Barton Rainey | 1,863 | 55.26 | ||
Legion | Joseph Sidney Dallenger | 1,654 | 49.06 | ||
Legion | Roy Russell | 1,626 | 48.23 | ||
Labour | Frank Hall | 1,618 | 47.99 | ||
Legion | Walter Cole | 1,616 | 47.93 | ||
Labour | Percy Dowse | 1,611 | 47.78 | ||
Labour | Charles Fenwick Hart | 1,541 | 45.71 | ||
Labour | Ronald George Maxwell | 1,530 | 45.38 | ||
Labour | Robert Webb Johnson | 1,494 | 44.31 | ||
Legion | Albert Frederick William Jackson | 1,453 | 43.10 | +4.81 | |
Legion | Harry Esmond Grieg | 1,435 | 42.56 | ||
Labour | Joseph Taylor | 1,367 | 40.55 | ||
Independent | James Eric Napier | 1,343 | 39.83 | -9.83 | |
Independent | William Henry Wilson | 1,220 | 36.19 | -16.12 | |
Independent | Percy Norman Player | 1,133 | 33.61 | ||
Independent | Richard James Joseph Burke | 982 | 29.13 | -15.24 | |
Independent | Frank Malcolm Thessman | 867 | 25.71 | -12.04 | |
The New Zealand Legion was a political organisation founded in New Zealand during the Great Depression. Its ideology was a mixture of nationalism, individualism, and social conservatism. It is sometimes considered to be a fascist group, although the group itself did not see itself in this light.
Henry Leonard James May was a New Zealand politician of the Labour Party. He was a cabinet minister from 1972 to 1975.
Melville Edwin Lyons, sometimes called Tiny, was briefly a Reform Party Member of Parliament in New Zealand until his election was declared void. A journalist by trade, he became involved in local politics in Christchurch after having served in WWI. He was Deputy Mayor of Christchurch for six years under mayor Ernest Andrews.
The Mayor of Upper Hutt is the head of the municipal government of Upper Hutt, New Zealand, and presides over the Upper Hutt City Council. The mayor is directly elected using a First Past the Post electoral system. The Upper Hutt Town Board had seven chairmen, with the role regarded as the predecessor role of mayor. The Upper Hutt Borough Council was proclaimed in 1926, and with that, the role of mayor was introduced. In 1966, Upper Hutt became a city council. The current mayor, Wayne Guppy, is the eleventh since the role was created in 1926, and he was first elected in 2001.
The city of Lower Hutt, New Zealand, was first proclaimed a borough on 1 February 1891. Prior to this it had been part of Hutt County, initially as a Roads Board and from 1881 as a Town Board.
Sir John Kennedy-Good was a New Zealand politician. He was mayor of Lower Hutt from 1970 to 1986.
Percy Dowse was a New Zealand politician. He was mayor of Lower Hutt from 1950 to 1970.
William Cooper Gregory was a New Zealand politician who was the Mayor of Lower Hutt from 1949 to 1950.
Thomas Glendwr Gardner "Glen" Evans was a New Zealand politician. He served as the mayor of Lower Hutt from 1986 to 1995.
John William Andrews was a New Zealand businessman and politician. He was Mayor of Lower Hutt from 1933 to 1947.
John Bryan Seddon was a New Zealand politician and chief executive. He was the deputy mayor of Lower Hutt and later chief executive of Porirua City Council for twenty years from 1980 until 2000.
William Thomas Strand was a New Zealand politician. He was Mayor of Lower Hutt on two occasions.
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