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Opinion
Home / Hawkes Bay Today / Opinion

Barry Soper: Anything can happen in National leadership battle

Barry Soper
Opinion by
Barry Soper
Newstalk ZB's senior political correspondent·Newstalk ZB·
25 Feb, 2018 04:00 PM3 mins to read
Barry Soper is Newstalk ZB's senior political correspondent

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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

It's 12 years since National has had a knock 'em down and drag 'em out leadership battle.

It was when John Key knocked Don Brash down and dragged him out of caucus, even though the year before the former Reserve Bank governor came within 2 per cent of knocking Helen Clark off her perch. Politics is a tough, unforgiving game.

Since then the National Party's leadership's been rock solid and so has its support base.

But with Bill English gone and another leadership unknown about to be put in his place, that's all about to change. Any change of this significance always affects a party's popularity and it would seem only one of the five contenders can prevent that if you listen to the opinion polls.

The iron maiden Judith Collins is the preferred choice of National Party supporters and that's been fairly consistently around 44 per cent of voters. But even though it should, public popularity won't decide who will step into Bill English's Hush Puppies tomorrow.

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That decision will be in the hands of the 56 National MPs - but whoever it is, he or she is highly unlikely to win the next election. It's become a pattern in New Zealand for Governments to get two terms or more, ever since the one-term Kirk/Rowling Labour Government in the 70s that achieved more in terms of reform than most Governments manage in three terms.

Word is that the best Collins can expect tomorrow is the deputy's job, with 41-year-old Simon Bridges appearing to have the edge but not yet enough to secure the job.

And with preferential voting, anything can happen in the ballots that'll be required until someone can reach the 29 votes required. That'll see support shifting from one candidate to another as the lowest polling wannabe drops off.

Over the weekend MPs have been bombarded with emails from their electorates telling them where to put their support.

Collins at the outset set herself a performance target of 35 per cent if she gets the nod. She reasons that once a party falls below that level of support it's in trouble and whoever is the leader should start looking over their shoulder.

She's shrewd because if she is slotted into the deputy's job, as is expected, the target will be for the new leader and if they fall below it, who'll be lying in wait?

But then again, if Collins does win she'll only have herself to blame.

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