Most Mayors get a welcome at their first council meeting.
But the controversial mayor of Horowhenua Michael Feyen says he's been met only with hostility.
"I had on that first meeting three notices of motion, that were put in, to not open the books, to not relitigate whether we sell the pensioner housing or not and to not relook at the building. Now they were all platforms that I stood on people that people want to be looked at and so they all voted 9-2 in favour and yet three of those councillors as I said at the public meeting so it's nothing new, I wondered how they could vote on such matters when we had never even had council briefings we have never had anything," says Mr Feyen.
The nine councillors who voted against Mayor Feyen say they are adamant they will support him, when his ideas are worth supporting.
"All the issues that he stood for and which we all stood for when you put yourself up to do the best for your district there is going to be lots of commonalities and it's those things that we want to pursue rather than the negatives," says Wayne Bishop, deputy mayor of Horowhenua.