Otago Daily Times

Week in Politics

- AUDREY YOUNG Audrey Young is political editor of The New Zealand Herald.

SELECTING Todd Muller as the new National Party leader is almost as big a gamble by the caucus as keeping Simon Bridges would have been.

His first challenge will be to pretend that the party is unified.

Pretending won’t be easy because he is essentiall­y a decent, honest guy without much political guile.

The first few days of his leadership will be crucial, both internally and publicly.

Muller's performanc­e needs to be assured, certain and authentic. The exposure he gets in the next week is likely to be the most intense coverage he is ever likely to get.

Those first impression­s will be vital to his credibilit­y.

The public may forgive some early missteps but he has to look like a credible potential Prime Minister, without having had any preparatio­n.

The geniuses, like John Key and Jacinda Ardern, can make it look easy when they get there.

But Leader of the Opposition is the most thankless job in politics because there are so many competing demands.

He has to oppose the Government while looking visionary.

He has to be careful and discipline­d in his messaging without sound rehearsed.

He has to promote and demote a caucus of 55 fragile and ambitious MPs.

And he has to criticise Jacinda Ardern is a way that does alienate her vast support base.

Nothing Muller has done before will prepare him for the pressures of the job of Opposition leader.

He cannot afford to long concentrat­e on the caucus beyond the leadership coup itself.

Decisions about his reshuffle will not unite a divided caucus but he has to be generous to minimise bitterness within the Bridges camp.

He has to decide what to do with former deputy leader and campaign manager Paula Bennett who has been replaced by Nikki Kaye.

And not least, Muller has to decide what to do about the high profile frontbench­er Judith Collins.

One thing that will be puzzling many people is why Collins was not running for the leadership contest this time.

With the country on the verge of a severe economic recession, Jacinda Ardern's greatest vulnerabil­ity is whether she has the background and strength to be the best leader for the times.

From that respect Collins is certainly the clearest alternativ­e to Ardern over Muller, and the one person who would have guaranteed an electric election campaign.

She has a national profile already. Her public persona is one of strength and no nonsense, although she has a softer side as well. She embodies both liberal and conservati­ve traditions in the party, being a social liberal, but a conservati­ve on law and order and economics.

She was a high performing Government minister and has perhaps been the most effective Opposition MP.

She is the closest the party has come to producing a Muldoon — someone who exudes authority and possibly relishes that fact a little too much.

Noone would be left wondering what her values were or whether she had the experience to handle the job.

Collins has certainly made no secret of her leadership ambitions in the past.

She has had two previous bids for leader, against Bill English in 2016 and against Simon Bridges in 2017, and two bids for deputy leader, against Paula Bennett in 2016 and again against Bennett in 2017. So where has she been?

The fact that her previous forays have been so unsuccessf­ul meant she has got to a point at which she is not going to enter another contest she is not assured of winning.

She does not want to be branded a perpetual loser.

Collins' ambitions rose to the fore again last year as the National Party grappled with two issues: a slump in support after the Christchur­ch massacre and its own internal debate over climate change policy, which was being stirred along by Collins.

That is when Muller started assessing his chances.

He had just been promoted from climate change to agricultur­e spokesman.

He was not going to challenge Bridges for the job but there was every likelihood that if Collins had challenged for the leadership last year, he almost certainly would have joined a contest last year.

It also happened that Bridges and Muller were on the same side in the climate change debate.

Attempts by Collins to drum up opposition to the Zero Carbon Bill were not successful in the broader agricultur­e sector or the caucus and she was seen as attempting to undermine Bridges.

Bridges was saved by the polls. The party's polling slump in midyear had recovered within four months and the rationale for a Collins bid faded.

Collins has gained more support and more respect among her peers in this term of Parliament but not enough. And none of her supporters are heavyhitte­rs in the caucus.

She is more popular in the party and among the public than she is among her colleagues.

She has had some influence over the outcome of this contest however and that is not to say her chance at leadership won’t come — possibly soon.

The caucus has gambled on Todd Muller to try to claw back the gulf between Labour and National.

There is a very small chance of him becoming the next Prime Minister in four months' time.

If he fails miserably, it will be time for the caucus to go crawling to Judith Collins to beg her to become leader.

 ?? PHOTO: OTAGO DAILY TIMES FILES ?? Waving placards and shouting slogans, an estimated 1300 employees of Mosgiel Ltd and supporters marched through the main street of Mosgiel in May 1980, protesting against possible closure of the mills.
PHOTO: OTAGO DAILY TIMES FILES Waving placards and shouting slogans, an estimated 1300 employees of Mosgiel Ltd and supporters marched through the main street of Mosgiel in May 1980, protesting against possible closure of the mills.

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