Len Brown: Letter to Manukau - 35,000 doorsteps
Letter to Manukau
9 September 2007
35,000
doorsteps.
What a journey! Over the last four years I have personally doorknocked a little over 35,000 homes across this city, and a team of enthusiastic supporters have visited on my behalf another 10,000 homes.
There are approximately 95,000 homes in our city. It has been an amazing tour, and of course it has not finished yet.
My
personal visits to our people have been the heart and soul
of my campaign to win the Mayoralty. It’s old style
politics in the modern age of email, texts and u tube. In
the vernacular, I am doing the “hard yards”. Bill
Clinton calls this “retail politics”. For me, I do it
because I think people ought to have the chance to meet the
person who wants to lead their city. In this age, people
feel distant from their government, from their
representatives, from their democracy. I want to try and
bridge that gap, and this is the best way I know
how.
“Come on in”
I also do this because I love
it. In recent months my progress has slowed a little because
people are increasingly getting me off the door steps to
come in for a cuppa, for a chat, or both. Often, they just
want to tell me their story, express their anger or
frustration, or pride in their town or community. I’ve
learnt to be a better listener and through these stories,
have a better understanding our history, and how we need to
approach our future.
I had a lady in tears of exasperation
at the impact of graffiti on her Manurewa home. She demanded
that I deal with it, and “bring back the pride”. Many
find the experience of finding me on their doorstep so
unique, that they take the opportunity of downloading 10
years of outstanding concerns. On me! After these house
visits I have pages and pages of jobs that council has
neglected to do for our residents over the years.
We are
different but the same.
There are some consistent themes
across our city and our ethnic and cultural differences. We
are all focussed on doing the best for our kids, getting
them the best chance in life. Everyone talks about schooling
and their local school. After all these years how the local
school is doing is still a barometer about how a community
feels about itself. We are all worried about drugs and the
risk our kids are on them. When people have kids in trouble
they don’t know where to go, and this lack of knowledge is
quietly wrecking good families. I am going to stand up on
this issue.
We are all worried about our safety around
home and in the city. Too many of us have been victims of
burglaries. I became involved as a witness in Dannemora of a
broad daylight heist on a Saturday afternoon. People are
however overwhelmingly prepared to do their bit in the
neighbourhood, to make their street safer. Thank God. We can
harness this energy for change.
A better story
In
reflecting on his time as President, Bill Clinton said that
he had been listening to people’s stories all his life,
and that everyone had a story. He had come to the view that
main point of his job as a politician was to try and give
people a chance to have a better story. Having had the
privilege of listening to the stories of thousands of my
fellow citizens over the last four years, I don’t think he
is far off the mark.
We all just want to get ahead, and have the best life that we can. We are all increasingly busy, working and as a result we spend less of our time relaxing with our families or in leisure pursuits. In amongst that we don’t ask a lot from our City and its Council. It’s not a lot to ask for us not to be rated out of our homes, that we all live in relative safety, that we move around our city with ungridlocked ease, that we don’t pollute our waterways and sea, and that we provide the essential utilities of our urban lives; power, water, wastewater, all reasonably priced and infrastructures competently maintained.
This is the better story. It’s time for us to deliver it.
Len Brown
Mayoral Candidate
- Manukau 2007