Tauranga City Council candidate Waitsu Wu's face was cut out and stuck on one of Tenby Powell's signs. Photo / Supplied
Bodies cut out, heads cut off, scrawled obscenities, mowed-down hoardings and scrapes on a classic car.
These are just some of the ways candidates for Tauranga City Council have seen their advertisements vandalised in the lead-up to this year's local government elections.
Some candidates say it's frustrating and costly butpart of the gig, while others say the attacks seem personal and targeted, and one puts it down to the antics of "drunken misfits".
Tauranga City councillor Steve Morris said more than $1000 of damage was done to his 1957 Morris Oxford classic car over the weekend.
The vehicle, which is sign-written to advertise Morris' campaign for re-election, was targeted while parked downtown in Mount Maunganui on Sunday.
Morris said he returned to the car and found a vandal had taken a rock and scraped both sides of the vehicle, leaving a line of bare metal across the car.
Been a hard weekend replacing signage that’s been destroyed not just by weather unfortunately 😑 tyre marks running right...
Erika Harvey has had two signs graffitied with black markers. Someone cut her body out of another sign with a box cutter and a fourth sign was "completely cut off the posts".
It cost close to $200 to repair the damage.
"I'm funding this all on my own so it's upsetting to have to budget for vandalism costs as well."
Mayoral candidate Kelvin Clout said vandalism of election hoardings was "rife" in Tauranga.
He said it was an environmental issue as well as one of cost, wasted time and a lack of respect.
With most of it happening on Friday or Saturday nights, the perpetrators were "presumably drunken misfits having some 'fun' on their way home after a night out on the town."
Jim Sherlock said one driver mounted the kerb to take out his sign in Welcome Bay.
Peter Gregson said that while he found election signage "unsightly" it was still necessary as a way to build name recognition - one of the biggest hurdles for new candidates.
"There is some growing traction in digital media but again hard to cover the numbers of people that potentially you can have driving past a sign each day."
Matthew Gill said he installed his signs on steel posts, so damage had been "minimal".
He did not condone bullying but said if candidates could not handle it, politics might not be the career for them.
Buddy Mikaere and David Grindley both said they were using digital media instead of signs.
Hugh Robb said no one had vandalised his "stuff" because "the people love me".