WBOP Māori ward councillor reacts to poll result

Darlene Dinsdale will be the Western Bay's first Waka Kai Uru Māori ward councillor. Photo / Supplied

Darlene Dinsdale says she’s disappointed she will only serve one term as Western Bay of Plenty’s Māori ward councillor.

She was elected to the Waka Kai Uru Māori Ward on Saturday, but the district also voted in a binding poll to remove the ward from 2028.

Māori wards guaranteed Māori representation on councils and the poll result was “disappointing”, Dinsdale said.

“We’ve only really got three years to ensure that our voices are heard for the benefit of all of our communities, iwi and hapū as well.”

The poll result and voter turnout was something to learn from, Dinsdale said.

“Maybe we didn’t do very well in terms of actually educating our people [about] the importance of the Māori ward.”

It was “really overwhelming” that so many people didn’t get out there and vote, Dinsdale said.

Progress results showed 7080 people voted to remove the Māori ward – about 2000 more votes than those wanting to keep it.

Overall voter turnout for the Western Bay was 33.98%, including 29.77% in the Māori ward as of 6.50pm on Saturday.

Māori wards weren’t new but recent legislation and the referendum “created differing opinions within our communities”, Dinsdale said.

It was hard knowing the seat wouldn’t exist in three years’ time, but Dinsdale would “advocate strongly” for her ward.

The “challenge” was the ward covered the entire district, but she planned to speak to the different communities and be their connection to the council.

Dinsdale lives in Te Puke and is a consultant and researcher. She is a member of the council’s combined Tāngata Whenua Forum and the Western Bay iwi representative for SmartGrowth.

Western Bay of Plenty Mayor James Denyer. Photo / David Hall
Western Bay of Plenty Mayor James Denyer. Photo / David Hall

Mayor James Denyer, who was re-elected to serve his second term, said Dinsdale was in a “tough position” only having the seat for three years.

It was a “key concern” for him when the council was “forced” to vote on whether to keep the ward or face a binding poll, he said.

“We heard loud and clear from tangata whenua ... even knowing that risk, they still wanted to have that Māori ward to show what it can achieve.”

In September last year, the council reaffirmed its decision to keep the ward.

The Government directed councils to rescind Māori wards established after 2021 or hold a binding referendum on them at this year’s local body elections.

The poll showed the value of testing the community’s views over time, Denyer said.

In the 2018 poll, 78% of voters were against establishing a Māori ward. For the 2025 poll, nearly 60% wanted to remove it.

“It was definitely worth asking the question and [the] community has spoken.”

Kaimai Ward councillor Margaret Murray-Benge. Photo / John Borren
Kaimai Ward councillor Margaret Murray-Benge. Photo / John Borren

Re-elected councillor Margaret Murray-Benge has been vocal in her opposition to Māori wards.

She voted against the ward in both council decisions.

“My view that it’s undemocratic to go down separate paths,” she told Local Democracy Reporting after her election win.

“People have been very worried about the separatism that’s coming in this country, so the vote does not surprise me at all.”

 

 

Other districts that voted to remove their Māori wards include Taupō, Thames, Hauraki, Matamata-Piako and Ōtorohanga.

Hamilton, Rotorua, Kawerau and Whakatāne voted to keep their wards.

LDR is local body journalism co-funded by RNZ and NZ On Air.

5 comments

Disappointed in WBOP

Posted on 13-10-2025 08:15 | By HotRatz

I look forward to seeing what Councillor Dinsdale can accomplish in her three year term. If anything perhaps she can encourage better voter turn out.


DEMOCRACY

Posted on 13-10-2025 09:18 | By rogue

This is how democracy works over an autocratic society.
2018 we rejected the wards.
Government interference creates the wards.
2025 we overwhelmingly vote to remove them.
Not often I agree Winston Peters or David Seymour, but clearly they got this one right... the numbers prove it.


Disappointed in WBOP

Posted on 13-10-2025 11:07 | By HotRatz

I look forward to seeing what councillor Dinsdale does in her three year term. If anything, maybe she can promote more voting turnout in WBOP.


We have spoken (3rd time)

Posted on 13-10-2025 15:44 | By jimmyant

Mayor Denyer finally has acknowledged that the people have spoken - regarding the removal of maori wards.
Surely it is no surprise after 2 previous polls that were clearly against. Hard to imagine why it took so long to come to that realisation. Unfortunately many councils do not listen to the people they represent (do they think they know better?)
However, have to be pleased with the final outcome.


Respect to Cr Dinsdale

Posted on 13-10-2025 17:48 | By Cap'n Cray

Respect to Cr Dinsdale for her stance.
Hopefully the divisiveness being promoted today will be replaced with a common wish for our beautiful country to become ; "All for one, and one for all", and we can shake off the "them and us" mentality.
In one term she can attain much...


Leave a Comment


You must be logged in to make a comment.