1949 Lower Hutt mayoral by-election

The 1949 Lower Hutt mayoral by-election was held to elect a successor to Ernst Peterson Hay who resigned as Mayor of Lower Hutt upon his appointment as a judge of the Supreme Court. The polling was conducted using the standard first-past-the-post electoral method.

1949 Lower Hutt mayoral by-election

← 1947 2 March 1949 1950 →
Turnout8,822 (38.35%)
 
Candidate William Gregory Harry Horlor
Party Citizens' Labour
Popular vote 4,437 4,345
Percentage 50.29 49.26

Mayor before election

Ernst Peterson Hay

Elected Mayor

William Gregory

Background edit

Mayor Ernst Peterson Hay had been appointed as a Judge of the Supreme Court of New Zealand and after joining the judiciary he resigned as mayor on 20 January 1949 triggering a by-election.[1] Citizens' Association councillor, and deputy mayor since 1947, William Gregory was elected to replace Hay, opposed only by councillor Henry Valentine "Harry" Horlor of the Labour Party, who had contested the mayoralty once before in 1941.[2]

Results edit

1949 Lower Hutt mayoral by-election[3]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Citizens' William Gregory 4,437 50.29
Labour Harry Horlor 4,345 49.26
Informal votes 40 0.45 -0.10
Majority 92 1.04
Turnout 8,822 38.35 -10.69

Results by locality edit

Following table shows the detailed ballot results by the local polling booths:[3]

Locality Gregory (Citizens') Horlor (Labour)
Votes % Votes %
R.S.A. Clubrooms 372 64.69 203 35.31
Taita North School 38 25.67 110 74.33
Taita Central 50 18.24 244 81.76
Gordon St. Hall 139 69.84 60 30.16
Baptist Hall 167 34.93 311 65.07
Waddington School 30 17.76 139 82.24
Seddon St. 100 23.48 326 76.52
Knox Hall 491 62.62 293 37.38
Epuni School 219 44.69 271 55.31
Birch St. YMCA 281 58.05 203 41.95
Waterloo School 311 53.71 268 46.29
Horticultural Hall 1,132 66.16 579 33.84
St Stephen's Hall 206 31.99 438 68.01
Waiwhetu School 189 45.76 224 54.24
Gracefield School 72 23.16 239 76.84
Hutt Central School 463 59.13 320 40.87
Congregational Hall 177 60.20 117 39.80
Total 4,437 50.29 4,345 49.26

Gregory was sworn in as mayor on 14 March at the first council meeting after the election. His first act was to nominate a successor to himself as deputy mayor. He nominated Eric Rothwell while Horlor nominated councillor Bella Logie, arguing that the role of deputy should go to a councillor of widespread appeal citing that Logie had polled third highest at the previous council election while Rothwell had polled eighth. Gregory disagreed and was disappointed that the council would not acclaim his nomination unanimously. A secret ballot was conducted by council members which resulted in a tie. Gregory used his casting vote for Rothwell.[4]

Council by-election edit

As Gregory was a councillor at the time of his election he had to resign his council seat upon being sworn in as mayor at the first council meeting after the election. This triggered a second by-election for one council seat. The chairman of the Citizens' Association, Charles Hain, wrote to the Hutt Labour Representation Committee with a proposal to settle together on a suitable candidate and avoid a further election. After receiving no reply after 11 days the Citizens' Association nominated former councillor Herbert Frederick Muir for the vacancy.[5] The Labour Party nominated Wellington Education Board and Petone and Lower Hutt Gas Board member James McDonald, who had stood for the city council in 1944, as its candidate.[6]

The following table gives the election results:

1949 Lower Hutt City Council by-election[7]
Party Candidate Votes % ±%
Labour James McDonald 2,262 50.88
Citizens' Herbert Muir 2,168 48.77 -0.85
Informal votes 16 0.35
Majority 94 2.11
Turnout 4,446 19.33 -29.71

Notes edit

  1. ^ McGill 1991, pp. 212.
  2. ^ "Hutt Mayoralty - Mr. Gregory Elected". The Evening Post. 3 March 1949. p. 8.
  3. ^ a b "Slight Reduction in Majority for Mr. W. C. Gregory". The Dominion. 4 March 1949. p. 6.
  4. ^ "Deputy-Mayor by Casting Vote". The Evening Post. 15 March 1949. p. 5.
  5. ^ "Coming Election". Hutt News. 23 March 1949. p. 7.
  6. ^ "Council Election - Labour Candidate". Hutt News. 30 March 1949. p. 7.
  7. ^ "Council by-election - Mr. J. McDonald elected". Hutt News. 20 April 1949. p. 7.

References edit

  • McGill, David (1991). Lower Hutt - The First Garden City. Petone, New Zealand: Lower Hutt City Council. ISBN 1-86956-003-5.