Utterly predictably, the National Party leader's inquest into his leaked travel expenses has turned toxic for his party, with the release of the result of an independent investigation. Consultants PwC have concluded the culprit was National MP Jami-Lee Ross, who took sudden leave from Parliament two weeks ago. Ross continues
Editorial: National's vote on Jami-Lee Ross will test its confidence in Simon Bridges
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However, all of that has become trivial after Ross' response to the PwC conclusions. He has made an accusation of illegality that has to be investigated regardless of what the caucus decides today. In doing so, publicly, Ross has stepped well outside the boundaries of party dissent. Worse, he is threatening to say more about his accusations against Bridges "in coming days". That sounds a threat to the caucus today which would discredit a decision to treat him leniently.
Many in the party must be dismayed that Bridges pursued a minor embarrassment to a point that was bound to become a major embarrassment for the party. What started as a trivial leak of internal travel expenses, three days before they would have been made public, has become a needless test of caucus loyalty to its new leader.
Bridges has left himself and his MPs in a position where anything less than expulsion of Ross - who could not remain MP for Botany if Winston Peters passes his waka jumping bill, which National opposes - will raise doubts that Bridges can survive as leader. It is a mess of his own making.