1993 Invercargill mayoral by-election

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1993 Invercargill mayoral by-election
Invercargill Coat of Arms.jpg
← 1992 20 March 1993 1995 →
Turnout30,159
  Mayor Shadbolt.jpg No image.png No image.png
Candidate Tim Shadbolt Bruce Pagan Mark Winter
Party Independent Independent Independent
Popular vote 10,049 5,739 4,791
Percentage 33.32 19.03 15.88

  No image.png No image.png
Candidate Mirek Cvigr Dougal Soper
Party Independent Independent
Popular vote 3,910 1,971
Percentage 12.98 6.53

Mayor before election

Dougal Soper (acting)

Elected Mayor

Tim Shadbolt

The 1993 Invercargill mayoral by-election was held on 20 March 1993 as a result of the death of Mayor Eve Poole on Boxing Day the previous year.

Background[]

Since losing the Waitemata City mayoralty in 1989, Tim Shadbolt had made several unsuccessful electoral runs, including 1992 mayoral elections in Auckland and Dunedin, in both of which he placed third.

The election attracted an unusually large pool of 14 candidates, including the incumbent deputy mayor and the two deputy mayors preceding him. Former Southland County Council chairman and father of candidate Janet Malloch,[1] Sir Erskine Bowmar, described it as "a bit of a joke".

Results[]

The following table gives the election results:

1993 Invercargill mayoral by-election[2]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Independent Tim Shadbolt 10,049 33.32
Independent Bruce Pagan 5,739 19.03 -16.16
Independent Mark Winter 4,791 15.88
Independent Mirek Cvigr 3,910 12.98 -13.96
Independent Dougal Soper 1,971 6.53
Independent Geoff Piercy 1,221 4.04
Independent Janet Malloch 762 2.52
Independent Anne Stoddart 718 2.38
Independent Neil Boniface 415 1.37
Independent Marjory Jones 268 0.88
Independent George Ngatai 114 0.37
Independent Katherine Hart 55 0.18
Independent Richard Osborn 50 0.16
Independent Owen Houliston 42 0.14
Majority 4,310 14.29
Turnout 30,159

References[]

  1. ^ Malloch, Janet (1992). From the tops: a daughter reminisces on the life of Erskine Bowmar. OCLC 154215383.
  2. ^ "Nominations Now Open For Local Government Candidates". 20 July 2019. Archived from the original on 20 August 2019. Retrieved 20 July 2019.


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