• Councillors discuss privatisation programme
• Port and airport shares emerge as top contenders for sale
• No appetite for selling golf courses, parks, social housing, water assets
• Critics call programme a rerun of Rogernomics
• Supporters want more work done on options
Auckland councillors are pushing ahead with a privatisation programme but are not of a mind to sell golf courses, parks, social housing and water services.
That leaves a partial or full sale of Auckland Airport and Ports of Auckland as the big ticket items, which outgoing Mayor Len Brown signalled would be a hot political issue for mayoral and council candidates at next year's local body elections.
Already, Labour MP Phil Goff, widely expected to announce on Sunday he is standing for the mayoralty, has ruled out selling port and airport shares. City-right mayoral candidate Mark Thomas has given qualified support to selling shares in the two assets.
A no-holds-barred review of council assets by two advisory firms, Cameron Partners and EY, said the council could raise billions of dollars by selling a range of assets from golf courses to the port and airport shares, respectively valued at $1.079 billion and $1.4 billion.