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Home / Rotorua Daily Post / Opinion

Barry Soper: In Jami-Lee Ross saga, Simon Bridges comes up short

Barry Soper
By Barry Soper
Newstalk ZB's senior political correspondent·Newstalk ZB·
16 Oct, 2018 04:00 PM3 mins to read

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Simon Bridges denies corruption allegations as Jami-Lee Ross is kicked out of the National Party.
Barry Soper
Opinion by Barry Soper
Barry Soper is Newstalk ZB's senior political correspondent
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COMMENT:

They usually ask a condemned man before his execution whether he'd like to say a few words.

Rather than taking his Caucus colleagues up on what was sure to be an offer, if he'd bothered to turn up two floors above, Jami-Lee Ross decided to have his last say to the media.

He strode confidently to the podium, clutching screeds of printed notes, apologised for the length of time it'd take, and 15 minutes later the journalists' jaws were being picked up from the unforgiving black and white stone tiles.

National MP for Botany Jami-Lee Ross leaving after his press conference at Parliament, Wellington. Photo / Mark Mitchell
National MP for Botany Jami-Lee Ross leaving after his press conference at Parliament, Wellington. Photo / Mark Mitchell
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It was like a script from House of Cards, it had all the ingredients, corruption, secret dinners, a six figure secret party donation, lies and more lies, claims of sexual harassment, bullying, intimidation, threats and fear and the promise of a police probe.

Ross was the man standing head and shoulders above his cowering colleagues, they were all too afraid to do what he'd done, even though many of them wanted to.

He was their crusader against the tyranny of a megalomaniacal leader, prepared to do anything and stamp out anyone who stood in his way of claiming the ultimate political prize, a prize Ross says he's ill equipped to lay claim to.

It was an impressive performance from a man we were told had mental health issues. He even addressed those, admitting there were issues but they'd been sorted, claiming that Bridges had sent him away to recover essentially to shut him up.

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Whatever the medication was, it spectacularly did the job. If all of what he'd claimed was to be believed, Bridges is now inedible toast.

Within an hour Bridges popped up at the same podium, flanked by those who'd fought him for his job eight months ago.

If ever he needed a performance this was it, rarely has a leader been so publicly maligned. The last would have been David Lange by his former Lieutenants Roger Douglas and Richard Prebble thirty years ago.

Unfortunately Bridges fell well short of what was expected from a leader who'd been accused of so much, not the least corruption involving the Electoral Act.

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11 Oct 04:00 PM
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A donation of $100,000 from a Chinese businessman is something that Bridges most certainly would have known about, and if you listen to Ross he not surprisingly invited the man round to his house for dinner.

Bridges sounded like Sergeant Schultz from Hogan's Heroes, he appeared to know nothing, or if he did, he repeatedly refused to address it, insisting time and time again he'd done nothing wrong, welcoming the intention to bring in the cops.

All in all it played out as a National Party soap opera, a bizarre day summed up by Winston Peters using his cellphone to do the talking, well singing Kelly's Heroes song Burning Bridges to journos.

The verse was entirely appropriate: Friends all tried to warn me but I held by head up high, with the final chorus, everyone I left behind each time I closed the door, burning bridges lost forevermore.

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