His dream car was a Tesla – but he also hankered for a Maserati. At the moment he was restricted to "a people mover Peugeot" and an electric car as a back-up. "We're a big family. You need two cars."
Bridges will be National's first Maori leader and his deputy Paula Bennett is also Maori. Bridges said he had learned quite a lot about his Ngati Maniapoto whakapapa and had been to his home marae near Waitomo.
While his grandmother had grown up on the marae, his father had not and Bridges himself had grown up in Te Atatu, as one of six children.
"I suppose I'm like a lot of Maori New Zealanders. I understand it now, it's something I'm interested in. It's an important part of me. But the truth is in my background it wasn't a prominent part of my background."
He said he grew up in a middle New Zealand household. His father was a Baptist minister and his mother stayed home with the six children.
"You wouldn't say financially it was privileged but we got good values, it was a great environment to grow up in. And we always came together at dinner time. It was a nurturing, strong family environment.
"In the context of modern New Zealand with all the gadgets and toys and things, it perhaps wasn't privileged. But I wouldn't say we went without. It was a good upbringing that I'm deeply grateful to my parents for."