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Dr. Eric Chuah Running For Auckland Mayor

Dr. Eric Chuah Running For Auckland Mayor

Scoop22-05-2025
This media statement is to confirm that Dr. Eric Chuah former party strategist for United NZ Hon. Peter Dunne in the 1999 NZ Parliamentary elections where Hon. Peter Dunne won the seat of Ohariu-Belmont in Wellington, and also electorate candidate for centrist party Rock the Vote NZ for the Auckland seat of Maungakiekie in the 2023 parliamentary elections will be running for the Auckland Mayoralty for this upcoming October 2025 Auckland Council elections.
Dr. Eric Chuah joined the National Party in March 2024 after standing down from running for Tauranga Mayor so as not to take away votes for the centrist and right Tauranga Mayoral candidates. Dr. Eric Chuah will also be running for Northcote Local Board and North Shore Local Ward for Auckland Councilor Position.
Dr. Eric Chuah's academic teaching and policy making experience while working as lecturer in Monash University and later University New South Wales in Australia seconded to Australian Defense Intelligence combined with his business and investment consulting experience on the ground level in New Zealand as a cafe owner, property developer, insurance broker, assistant manager for telemarketing, Telstra Territorial Manager for Karori Wellington and Asia Pacific Manager for Fire Denyers International a NZ owned fire alarm system company that won the Housing NZ award will provide and enhance the necessary strategic vision and also capacity to create Action Plans to have better delivery of local council services, minimise increase in rates unnecessarily and ensure health safety for local residents and businesses liaising with NZ Police for better policing.
When you serve the local council and local government it is for all NZders, notwithstanding their political preferences be it left right or center. This is to ensure efficient facilitation and Action Plans to better public transport, better traffic flow, better waste water management services.
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Exclusive: More explicit rumours about Tory Whanau – this time from Auckland councillor Maurice Williamson
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Exclusive: More explicit rumours about Tory Whanau – this time from Auckland councillor Maurice Williamson

Whanau, who has no objection to the Herald publishing the video as an example of the abuse she faces, said Williamson's comments 'make me feel sick'. 'It seems to be these older, weird creepy men who speak about me but also others like that. This sexualisation of women in leadership roles is purely intended to dehumanise and reduce us in terms of character.' Auckland Councillor Maurice Williamson spread a sexually explicit rumour about the Wellington Mayor during an Auckland Council committee meeting in 2023. Photo / Brett Phibbs The revelation comes after the Herald obtained an email written by Wellington mayoral candidate Ray Chung in which he passed on gossip from a neighbour about Whanau having 'tempestuous' drug-fuelled sex on New Year's Eve 2022 and having 'soft pendulous breasts'. This new rumour, like the New Year's Eve gossip, was not true, said Whanau, and was equally able to be proven false. She said the rumours were part of highly-sexualised dialogue aimed at her – and other female politicians – to demean them and undermine their roles. Williamson's comment was captured on the official Auckland Council recording but never made public. The Herald has obtained the key section, in which Williamson makes reference to Whanau allegedly performing a sex act. He has been approached for comment but is yet to respond. The video did not capture the beginning of Williamson's comments because of meeting business, and the end of his comments were indistinct because fellow councillors were trying to shout the former National MP down. As Williamson continued to speak, somebody at the meeting shouted: 'Maurice, Maurice, you better belt up mate'. Independent Māori Statutory Board deputy chairman Tau Henare, who sat in Cabinet as a minister alongside Williamson in the late 90s, can be heard immediately calling a point of order. 'I actually think you should sanction that outburst. 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Wellington Mayor Tory Whanau says women leaders, such as former Prime Minister Dame Jacinda Ardern (centre) and former minister Kiritapu Allan (right), have had to deal with increased sexualised commentary in recent years. Photo / Peter de Graaf 'I'm a woman in leadership, I'm progressive. I want the best for my community and I have the policies to deliver that. So what do these weird men do? They assassinate your character instead.' Whanau said for two years she has had to put up with people calling her 'c***sucker' and saying 'she's probably in the toilets giving another blow job'. Tau Henare called out Maurice Williamson's lewd comments immediately. Photo / NZME She said Williamson phoned her at the time to apologise, but it seemed 'disingenuous'. She claims he talked over her and didn't tell her who he had gossiped with. 'He didn't actually let me speak,' she said. 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A council spokeswoman said they found 'no further action was appropriate because a direct apology, verbal and in private, was given soon after the incident and Mayor Whanau, through her office, had advised that she did not seek any further action be taken'. The spokeswoman said training was now provided for online meetings. David Fisher is based in Northland and has worked as a journalist for more than 30 years, winning multiple journalism awards including being twice named Reporter of the Year and being selected as one of a small number of Wolfson Press Fellows to Wolfson College, Cambridge. He joined the Herald in 2004. Sign up to The Daily H, a free newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

Westmere helipad appeal disappoints rich-listers Ali Williams and Anna Mowbray
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