In any event Brown can claim a renewed mandate from a third of the voters in the country.
With the prime minister and the leader of the opposition he has the biggest bully pulpit in the country. To keep their place at the top table John Key and David Cunliffe need to win over Len Brown's voters. Everyone knows that whoever wins Auckland next year wins the prime ministership.
That makes Brown the kingmaker. He's achieved most of the important things he needed last term. The Unitary Plan is done and dusted. Brown's wish-list for transport is approved.
So given his new status he should be able to squeeze more from the Government on transport and housing if he plays it right.
On the local front, there's been a slight move to the right in his new council. But one of the benefits of office the mayor enjoys is having plenty of powerful roles and baubles to dish out to ensure a working majority on his council.
In his last term he was everything to everyone. That isn't going to work this time.
The political lines are going to be harsher. His opponents will attack more often. His base will expect more from him.
Sitting on the fence when his Ports of Auckland workers were being shafted was a disgrace. Defending obscene management salaries and directors' fees while having to be coaxed to support a living wage for other workers sends the wrong message.
If the mayor reads the vote correctly, expect senior heads to roll at Ports of Auckland. Some of the suits on the transport and water boards should dust off their CVs too. Let's see if salaries at the top get curtailed and the council wages at the bottom move up.
Brown deserved a second term. But only just.