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Home / Bay of Plenty Times / Opinion

Kate Hawkesby: Amy Adams the clear frontrunner over Simon Bridges and Judith Collins for National leadership

Kate  Hawkesby
By Kate Hawkesby
NZ Herald·
14 Feb, 2018 05:56 PM3 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
Kate  Hawkesby
Opinion by Kate Hawkesby
Kate Hawkesby is the host of Early Edition on Newstalk ZB, Monday to Friday from 5am – 6am.
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The race is very much on to be National's top dog. And while candidates are throwing their hats into the ring, we're all doing what we do best: watching and throwing in our 10 cents' worth.

So here's mine. I'd pick Amy Adams. I like the strong silent type. The hard worker, shunning spotlight opportunities for the spotlight's sake, considering her thoughts before spewing them out, and actually doing the hard grind. If you want to put style to one side and go with substance, she's your woman.

She has the credentials. She's a straight bat. Image-wise she's a slow burner, a nerd. But nerds are good. She'll get there. She seems the most decent, and the least there for self-interest purposes. I saw her give a speech once at a casual event in Christchurch and she was excellent.

I didn't know much about Adams - her low profile could be a problem - but within minutes of hearing her, I was extremely impressed. Impressed by her depth of knowledge, her warmth, and her connection to her constituents. Critically, she talked mostly about them, not herself.

Which leads me to Simon Bridges. I can't take him seriously, I know everyone is, but I can't. How do you take seriously a man whose speech to pitch himself as the future leader of the National Party, sounded like a stage performance from Lyn of Tawa.

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"Oim" the right person.

"Oim" excited.

"Oim" a 'natch-rill' fit for 'Nash-nil loidership'.

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That accent on the world stage would kill me.

The worst part of all of this though is the amount of times he referred to himself in the third person - unless you're Kanye West, this is a categorical no-no.

"Oim" focused on "Soimin" Bridges. Soimin, it's a no from me.

Then there's Crusher. Judith Collins is terrifying. I'm scared and I'm not even a politician. But she plays the game, she knows the game, she is an attack dog and the only thing about that is whether it's of a time gone by. We've moved on from that Thatcher-esque style haven't we?

Discover more

New Zealand|politics

Jonathan Coleman rules himself out of leadership race

15 Feb 01:40 AM
Opinion

Political Roundup: Why Bridges is Nats' best bet

15 Feb 04:27 AM

Her experience in the theatre of politics can't be ignored, but her aggressive style may alienate her from people, especially if this 'generational shift' is to be subscribed to

Millennials are into Kombucha and holding hands, not ripping people to shreds and ruling with an iron fist. Having said all of that, I think outside of the political spotlight she's not so bulldog.

I saw her in the supermarket the other day and refreshingly, I didn't feel like I needed to fear for my life. She seemed less scary matriarch, and more regular shopper. Which leads me to believe the political persona is just that, a persona.

So what do you go with? A solid slow burner with all of the smarts? An established hard political player whose come out swinging day one? Or 'Soimin, Oim focusing on Soimin', Bridges?

There are still others who may tip themselves into the ring. I'm picking we'll hear from Steven Joyce (if he can find the numbers) which he just might, and Jonathan Coleman - if he can find the numbers (which he probably won't).

But there may also be some wildcards. Either way, as far as political theatre goes, it's time to grab the popcorn.

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