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Home / Bay of Plenty Times

Extent of renewal in National remains big issue for leadership rivals

Audrey Young
By Audrey Young
Senior Political Correspondent·NZ Herald·
18 Feb, 2018 04:00 PM4 mins to read

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The three National leader candidates Judith Collins, Simon Bridges, and Amy Adams all say why they should be the next National leader. / Mark Mitchell

The National Party leadership contest is heating up, with rival candidates stepping up meetings with the many undecided MPs in a bid to get them over the line.

One of the major points of discussion with the candidates is the degree of renewal needed in the party, with the future of chief strategist and former finance minister Steven Joyce expected to be an issue.

Amy Adams went to Auckland on Saturday to lobby colleagues for support. She spent Sunday in Canterbury doing the same thing.

Simon Bridges spent the weekend in Tauranga and in the Waikato talking to colleagues and party members.

And Judith Collins continued her campaign from Auckland to the wider party membership and public, to put pressure on MPs to back her. Some MPs report being on the receiving end of such pressure.

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They will be heading back to Wellington on Monday for a Tuesday caucus meeting, the first since Bill English announced last week he was stepping down.

For five days, Joyce has been considering standing and on Sunday told the Herald he was still discussing it with colleagues and would have a decision in a day or two.

Joyce has run the past five election campaigns for National, which polled 44.4 per cent of the vote last September, well above Labour's 36.9 per cent.

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Bridges claims to have good momentum and his numbers were growing. But many colleagues were keeping their counsel, and thinking it through.

"There is still everything to play for this week," Bridges said.

Adams rejected speculation that Bridges was ahead in the low 20s while she had only 15 of the 29 votes needed.

"I don't accept those numbers ... I am feeling really good about how we are looking. I think our numbers are strong and are improving all the time," she said.

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"I'm certainly not declaring that we are over the line but we are feeling good about where we are."

Joyce's future is expected to be an issue whether or not he joins the contest.

Strategist and campaign manager Steven Joyce has run the past five campaigns for National, which won the party 44.4 per cent of the vote in 2017. Photo / Michael Craig
Strategist and campaign manager Steven Joyce has run the past five campaigns for National, which won the party 44.4 per cent of the vote in 2017. Photo / Michael Craig

Former minister Mark Mitchell may well join the contest on Monday, although his chances, like Joyce's, are remote.

Asked about Joyce's future, Adams said a new leader, whoever they were, had to have the space and the ability to make whatever calls needed to be made to give the party the best chance of winning in 2020.

"It is certainly not a 'night of the long knives' but equally we have to show there is a renewal taking place and an evolution which is normal and appropriate in any organisation.

"I've made it really clear that I'm going to keep all my options open for who has what position."

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Adams said it was wrong to put too much store on early numbers and it was important that caucus took the time to think the decision through, and were not rushed.

"It is a critical decision for us," she said.

"If we get this decision wrong, it is going to be much harder [to run] a to run cohesive campaign and look like we are ready to govern in 2020 and I believe we will be and we have to be."

Bridges said the extent of renewal was a live issue with MPs.

"Newer MPs will clearly want to see progression and my message to them has been it will be blend of experience but also new talent and I understand the need to keep that new talent coming through."

Former minister Mark Mitchell may well join the contest. Photo / File
Former minister Mark Mitchell may well join the contest. Photo / File

Asked if it was fair to interpret his comments as representing greater renewal than Adams, he said yes.

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"We are at a crossroads," he said. "The John Key-Bill English era was hugely successful but it has come to an end and one of the difficult issues we have is the level of change, both in terms of the team and in terms of our policy settings.

"I'm no radical but we do need to move those things on in both areas to some degree.

"On the team front, of course we have got to keep heft and experience but newer MPs deserve their go," he said.

On policy, the party had to start talking about what it was going to do.

Judith Collins is campaigning as candidate from the right who says National has gone too far to the left and needs "to straighten up".

She cited the accommodation the party made to the Maori Party in the Resource Management Act, the iwi participation clauses.

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The leadership vote is due to be taken on Tuesday next week, although some MPs have expressed a hope privately that the candidates will be able to sort out an outcome later this week.

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