The New Zealand Herald

Prime Minister has handed his opponents a weapon to use

- Audrey Young comment

The resignatio­n of Todd Barclay has taken the immediate pressure off Prime Minister Bill English.

But the episode will forever be a stain on his leadership and career.

The disturbing part about the events of this week at Parliament is the lack of contrition from English.

Of course he is terribly sorry that it has come to this — Barclay’s premature retirement from politics.

He and Barclay seem terribly sorry for themselves and their party.

But English has failed to admit any wrongdoing or apologise for the way he handled things.

Barclay bowed to the inevitable by resigning. It was either jump or be pushed by the party after two revelation­s yesterday.

First was English’s text to Barclay’s electorate chairman obtained by the Newsroom website telling him the MP had left a dictaphone running on his secretary’s phone conversati­on.

Barclay’s subsequent denials that he had spoken to English about the matter forced English to produce his police interview on April 27, 2016, which contradict­ed Barclay.

It said Barclay had not only recorded his electorate secretary’s conversati­ons but that he knew that because Barclay had told him.

There was no grand motive in releasing the police statement. It was a pre-emptive move. English published it because after Official Informatio­n Act requests, its explosive contents may have been released by police in the midst of an election campaign. Until then, he had explicitly objected to its release by

There was no grand motive in releasing the police statement. It was a pre-emptive move.

the police in a fuller OIA release on the dictaphone investigat­ion.

English is now attributin­g higher motives to his other actions than they deserve. When he fronted the media yesterday after Barclay’s resignatio­n had been extracted, he said he had done the proper thing by informing the electorate chairman and by telling the police last year.

The fact is the electorate chairman, Stuart Davie, extracted the admission from English in a text conversati­on after telling English that Barclay had denied rumours about recordings.

And he talked to the police a full two months later as part of a their inquiry. He did not tell the police in order that the matter be investigat­ed. He talked to police because they had come across his text to Davie in the course of their investigat­ion.

English then sat on the informatio­n and watched while Barclay deflected questions from media and more importantl­y Southland electors on an issue they had a right to know about, and did nothing to encourage Barclay to co-operate with the police investigat­ion, which was dropped.

Barclay’s comments have sounded very legalistic and designed to avoid any liability or responsibi­lity for their actions and stave off further action.

English too, has said far less about the recordings than he did in his police statement. He began his press conference yesterday by saying “the business about the recordings has been never quite establishe­d”.

The Prime Minister’s failures are largely failures of omission — but failure to do the right thing can be as big a failure as anything.

He failed to exercise standards he would expect of others and he has handed his political opponents a weapon to use against him for the next three months to election day. The latest from the All Black and Lions camps ahead of the first test at Eden Park on Saturday. Southern US states brace for Tropical Storm Cindy. Will Reserve Bank Governor Graeme Wheeler hold the Official Cash Rate as expected? His decision is due at 9am. What is the future of the electric car? Mike finds out from the co-creator of Tesla Motors, Ian Wright after 8 this morning.

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