24 August 2004
Disenfranchised Wellington Voters Return to Tim’s Campaign
Wellington Mayoral Candidate, Tim O’Brien, says he’s overwhelmed by the Wellington people who have told him that now
he’s standing they have someone to vote for.
“One elector told me that he will now vote for the first time since Carmen ran in the late seventies,” Tim laughed.
Tim O’Brien says that on a more serious note the level of disaffection among Wellington voters in an indication with how
out of step with public feelings the Wellington council has become.
“The recent rise in parking charges is an issue raised by people from all backgrounds,” he says.
“There’s a perception that inner city height allowances agreed in the District Plan arbitrarily enforced; that the
character of neighbourhoods in the city and suburbs can change with little consultation; and that open space is up for
grabs.
“These are issues where people feel they have no input or that their views are ignored,” Tim O’Brien says. “That has led
to cynicism and many people entirely giving up on the process.”
Tim says the aim of his candidacy is to bring the whole city’s views back into play so people will realise it is worth
their time and effort to collaborate on the city’s future.
“The city is a collaborative enterprise and all of us have the same interest in its success,” he says.
Writer and broadcaster, Tim O’Brien, is a native Wellingtonian. He says he was persuaded to stand for the mayoralty by
the possibility that a wide range of views about the city’s future were not going to be represented in the current
campaign.
ENDS