Citizens and Ratepayers Now
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Citizens and Ratepayers Now is an established centre-right leaning local body ticket in Auckland, New Zealand. Its predecessor organisation, the Citizens and Ratepayers Association, was formed in 1937 with a view to control the Auckland City Council and prevent the left leaning Labour Party from control. It has been the organisation that has mostly controlled Auckland City in the post World War 2 years.
[edit] History
The Citizens and Ratepayers Association was formed in 1937. During the period 1944-1971, the council was under the control of C&R barring three years between 1953-1956. C&R people were involved in the sanitation and drainage infrastructure for Auckland, the Auckland Harbour Bridge (driven in particular by C&R councillor, then Mayor Sir Jack Allum. Other notable events include management of the city during World War 2, construction of Auckland International Airport, and construction of the Civic Administration building.
In more recent years, C&R constructed the Aotea Centre, brought in updated by-laws, and started to commence a number of cultural initiatives, including construction of a new central library, massive renovation of the Auckland City Art Gallery in the mid 1980s, and reaching around 300 parks and reserves within the Auckland City limits. Cultural and community centres were also constructed at a rapid pace.
In 1989, amalgamation of the various council boroughs around Auckland saw the potential for some significant upheaval to the management of Auckland City. However, this was overseen with relatively little angst, in the words of Graham Bush, Auckland City Historian. C&R enjoyed almost constant control of the Auckland City in the second half of the 20th Century. C&R rarely stood Mayoral candidates, preferring to concentrate on the council organisation, but has given tacit and low key approval short of endorsement to some Mayoral candidates in the past.
During the 1990s, Citizens and Ratepayers came under some criticism for being seen as inflexible and out of touch with voters. Many of the C&R councillors had served for many years and there was a perception that it was lacking in fresh faces. Public discontent over issues like Metrowater, waste removal, the Britomart Transport Centre and proposed property developments alongside it saw sustained criticism of Auckland's political management.
[edit] Recent Elections
In the 1998 election, a new ticket was formed by former C&R members with a view to bringing the "old" C&R organisation back to its more fiscally prudent and centre-right roots. This new organisation, Auckland Now, was only successful in winning two council seats, but its contesting the election across the city split the centre-right vote and ended C&R control of the city.
After the 1998 election, a rapprochement between the Citizens and Ratepayers Association and Auckland Now occurred, with an agreement to contest the 2001 elections together under the brand "Citizens and Ratepayers Now". This merged organisation was successful in winning back the council, simultaneously with the election of the independent and controversial centre-right Mayor John Banks (New Zealand). However, at the 2004 election, a backlash occurred against C&R Now in some wards, seeing control of the city go back to the City Vision ticket, as well as the election of a new Mayor, Dick Hubbard. In particular, the C&R Now policy of promoting a roading thoroughfare across Hobson Bay, known as the Eastern Transport Corridor (overlooked by many expensive homes) saw C&R Now lose significant support in its heartland region of Hobson Ward to a new anti-motorway ticket called Action Hobson. It has since discarded this policy leading up to the 2007 local body elections.
C&R Now also contests other regional elections in Auckland, including the Auckland Regional Council (a transport and environmental body), the Auckland District Health Board (which controls the management of Auckland's main health agency), the Auckland Energy Consumer Trust that controls Vector Limited and various licensing trusts for public bars.