Mayor & councillors
The City of Ryde has 13 councillors: a Mayor elected directly by voters (unlike most Sydney councils, where councillors choose the mayor), plus four councillors for each of three wards — Central, East and West. Below is who currently holds office, with links to their official profiles and the September 2024 election results.
New to these terms? Read them in plain English
- How the mayor is chosen
- Either elected directly by voters, or chosen by the councillors.
- Ward
- A subdivision of a council area that elects its own councillors.
- Local Government Area (LGA)
- The official area a council governs.
- NSW Electoral Commission (NSWEC)
- Runs council elections and publishes the official results.
- Mayor
- Trenton Brown (Liberal)Popularly elected Mayor (directly by voters); declared elected 1 October 2024.
- Deputy Mayor
- Cr Sophie Lara-Windred (Liberal)East Ward; elected by councillors, re-elected for a second term at the 23 September 2025 Ordinary Meeting. Elected to council in 2024 under the name Sophie Lara-Watson; now uses Lara-Windred.
- Councillors
- 13 total — directly-elected Mayor + 12 ward councillors
- Wards
- Central, East and West (4 councillors each)
Your representatives
Trenton Brown
Mayor · Liberal
Sophie Lara-Windred
Deputy Mayor / Councillor · East Ward · Liberal
Daniel Han
Councillor · Central Ward · Liberal
Shweta Deshpande
Councillor · Central Ward · Liberal
Lyndal Howison
Councillor · Central Ward · Labor
Tina Kordrostami
Councillor · Central Ward · Greens
Keanu Arya
Councillor · East Ward · Liberal
Penny Pedersen
Councillor · East Ward · Labor
Roy Maggio
Councillor · East Ward · Independent
Justin Li
Councillor · West Ward · Liberal
Kathy Tracey
Councillor · West Ward · Liberal
Cameron Last
Councillor · West Ward · Liberal
Felix Lo
Councillor · West Ward · Labor
Want to raise something? Contacting your ward councillor or the mayor is one of the most direct ways to be heard between elections.
We list who's in office and link to their official profiles and the election results; we don't characterise anyone's politics. Party labels are those each councillor was elected under at the September 2024 election (NSW Electoral Commission). A council's makeup can change between elections through casual vacancies, so the council's official page has the most current list.
Sources — check it yourself
Figures are current as at the dates shown and may change — always confirm with the linked source. See the notice at the bottom of the page for full details and how to report a correction.