Hamilton City Council King ran for the
Hamilton City Council in the West ward with his son Josh on the "Two Generations" ticket in the
2013 elections. King received the fifth-most votes and was elected. However, Josh received the eighth-most and was not elected. King announced his mayoral campaign on 1 August 2016. His Mayoralty saw significant rates rises for Hamilton residents, with rates rising an average of 9.7% in 2018. He also led the council in purchasing multiple properties on the
Waikato River in order to develop a central city river park. The decision was controversial, with King casting the tie-breaking vote when the council voted on the plan, although he defended the plan as crucial to connecting the Hamilton City Center to the Waikato River. He also pushed for the adoption of Māori wards for Hamilton and the addition of Kirikiriroa, Hamilton's Māori name as a second official name of the city. King ran for a second term in the
2019 Hamilton mayoral election, he was challenged by City Councillor
Paula Southgate, who he had defeated by just six votes in 2016. King was soundly defeated by Southgate at the election, securing just under 2500 more votes than King. He defended the rates rises that occurred during his mayoralty, citing them as necessary to fixing the city's finances, saying "I'm very proud of what we've done and what we've achieved, and there was a price to pay for that – and that was my job."
Post Mayoralty A Liverpool Street mansion sold by King in 2021 set the record for Hamilton's most expensive house sale, at $5.5 million. He had bought the house in 2017 for $2.05M and lived in it with his family while working as mayor. The purchasers were a group of developers. In April 2022, King announced his intent to seek the
National Party nomination to contest
Hamilton West at the
next general election in 2023, having joined the party shortly after losing the Hamilton mayoralty. Six months later, incumbent MP
Gaurav Sharma resigned from Parliament, triggering a
by-election in the seat. Shortly before the party released its shortlist of candidates, King confirmed that he was out of the running. He wouldn't confirm whether he stood aside voluntarily or at the direction of the party, which was operating under expectations from leader
Christopher Luxon to improve the diversity of its candidates. ==Personal life==