Deputy Prime Minister Paula Bennett has been in the Clutha-Southland electorate for the past couple of days and says the electorate is moving on quickly after the resignation of MP Todd Barclay.
And National campaign chairman and Finance Minister Steven Joyce describes the events of the past week as "bumps" and says he does not believe it will affect the party's conference in Wellington this weekend, three months out from the election.
"Politics is brutal in every way - brutal on an individual like that but also brutal in the way that everyone moves on so quickly."
She said that within three days of former Prime Minister John Key resigning "it was kind of like 'the King is dead, long live the King'."
Barclay resigned after it was revealed he had confided in Prime Minister Bill English last year that he had taped his former electorate agent's phone calls during an employment dispute.
The political blowtorch was then applied to English who had sat for over a year while Barclay denied it and refused to cooperate with a police investigation, which was dropped for lack of evidence.
About 700 delegates have registered for the party's conference in Wellington including half a dozen from Clutha-Southland.
Bennett said Barclay was not expected at the conference, but that was his personal choice.
She said there was a sense of disbelief in Clutha-Southland that things had happened as quickly as they had.
"But actually they were turning their sights as to who was next."
Like Joyce, she did not think National's bad week would affect the conference.
"People will go 'God, what a week... and we don't want too many of them, thanks.'"
People will go 'God, what a week...and we don't want too many of them, thanks.'
Joyce said the events of the week would not significantly affect the conference.
"We have got a pretty experienced crew of volunteers who have seen a lot over the years and they know that these bumps happen from time to time," he said.
"They'll be ready to get on with the job and I don't think they will let this get in the way of their conference in any way, shape or form."
He said the events of the week, including complaints about Labour's foreign intern scheme, would remove any complacency.
Barclay was selected last December after a bitter contested reselection. English, the former MP for Clutha-Southland, described what happened there as a "spectacular bust-up."
Party president Peter Goodfellow said nominations for a new Clutha-Southland candidate would reopen in a week and stay open for a couple of weeks.
He said he addressed the issue of what happened in Clutha-Southland at a meeting on Friday with electorate and campaign chairs and candidates.
"I just said 'look this is the elephant in the room.'"