The New Zealand Herald

Bill English has (almost) no one to blame but himself

- Audrey Young comment

Bill English has damaged his leadership over the Todd Barclay affair and he has no one to blame but himself — well, almost no one.

The damage would not have occurred at all if Barclay had not been stupid enough to put a tape on his electorate secretary, with whom he was having an employment dispute.

If that hadn’t happened, the only damage English would be facing three days out from his first party conference as Prime Minister would be quite different.

Nicky Wagner’s thoughtles­s tweet about the disability sector, Alfred Ngaro’s arrogant speech about NGOs who criticise the Government, highhanded officials in Simon Bridges’ office trying to stop Official Informatio­n Act releases, budget errors in the Ministry of Health, and the credibilit­y of the Auditor General would have been the main irritants in his Government’s record. A doddle by comparison. Now the PM’s own credibilit­y is an issue because of what he did after Barclay confided in him.

He sat by and allowed Barclay to deny and deflect allegation­s publicly in the hope it would eventually fade away.

English did not even behave properly when the text evidence first emerged on Newsroom yesterday that he had known about the secret recording for at least a year.

English stretched credulity by

No one believes English forgot who told him. One of the most believable politician­s suddenly defied belief.

insisting he couldn’t remember who told him, only later revealing that the police held evidence in his own statement that it was Barclay himself who had told him.

Hearing someone’s confession is not something you forget. No one believes English forgot who told him. One of the most believable politician­s suddenly defied belief.

The damage to English’s leadership may have lessened marginally if Barclay had offered his resignatio­n from politics last night.

Instead in his so-called press conference Barclay showed why he has to go.

Even in the face of an admission from the Prime Minister, Barclay talked in riddles to avoid saying anything that could be construed as an admission that he taped his secretary.

He keeps repeating that he can’t talk because of legal reasons but it is fairly obvious the legal reasons are fear of the law courts.

Barclay is damaging his party and damaging his leader.

He doesn’t have much time to do the decent thing and announce his retirement from politics at the next election — a day at most.

If he doesn’t, the National Party board has the power to rescind his membership for bringing the party into disrepute and effectivel­y end his candidacy.

Whether Barclay goes quietly or unwillingl­y, it reflects very badly on English at the start of the election campaign.

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