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Local democracy does not function the same way national democracy does, and Auckland is paying the price for that gap.
At a national level, governments are held to account every day. There is an organised opposition; competing ideas are tested in public, and alternative policies are constantly being developed. In local government, once a mayor and a dominant ticket are elected, meaningful opposition often disappears for most of the term.
That is exactly the situation Auckland now finds itself in.
Following the recent local elections, Mayor Wayne Brown and Fix Auckland Councillors and local ward members are firmly in place.
But there is no Greater Auckland-wide alternative operating between elections, no sustained challenge, no shadow platform, and no organised scrutiny until a few months before the next vote in 2028.
That is not a healthy democracy; it is a free ride.
This matters because Auckland is no longer just a big city grappling with routine council decisions. By 2028, Auckland’s population will be approaching 1.9 million people. When combined with Northland, Waikato, and the Bay of Plenty, the Golden Triangle, we are looking at a connected region of around three million people. At that scale, this region would rank second only to New South Wales, Victoria, and Queensland in Australia.
Regions of that size cannot afford thin scrutiny or last-minute political debates. Decisions being made now, on rates, debt, infrastructure sequencing, planning rules, and transport, will shape economic opportunity, land values, and community wellbeing across the wider region for decades. Growth without challenge is expensive, and the costs tend to fall first on rural and fringe communities.
As someone who stood in Franklin, I saw firsthand how disconnected Auckland Council decision-making can be from the lived reality of places like Pukekohe, Waiuku, and Wairoa.
These communities are not inner-city suburbs, yet they are too often governed as if they were, paying the rates while receiving fewer services, and bearing the consequences of urban rules applied to rural places.
That is why I am choosing to stand up early, not for personal ambition, but because opposition only matters if it exists while decisions are being made, not just when election season rolls around.
Auckland needs alternative views tested in public, hard questions asked consistently, and a visible check on power between elections.
I also want to acknowledge and thank Councillors Bo Burns and Maurice in Howick. While we represent different parts of Auckland, we share similar beliefs about accountability, local democracy, and genuine appreciation and love for East Auckland. Connections like this across wards show that alternative thinking already exists; it simply needs to be visible, organised, and heard.
Auckland is now an Australasian-scale region, but it is still governed with too little democratic competition at the local level.
If we want this city and the wider Golden Triangle to realise their full value and wealth, we must strengthen democracy between elections, not just during them.
Someone needs to keep asking questions. I intend to be one of those voices.
Dene Green, Waroa/Franklin


