The New Zealand Herald

Is this a poll too far for Bridges?

- Audrey Young

One thing we have learned about Simon Bridges in the 27 months since he became National Party leader is that he is a scrapper.

A dirty little street fighter, is how his wife, Natalie Bridges, described him in March last year when prediction­s of his demise were common.

After last night’s dreadful poll results for National — 30.6 per cent compared with 56.5 per cent for Labour — panic will be starting to take hold in the National caucus and Bridges will be facing the fight of his life.

Bridges’ supporters will be reminding them of what happened last year soon after Natalie Bridges’ comments.

Labour surged after Jacinda Ardern’s acclaimed handling of the Christchur­ch massacre.

Labour surged to 50.8 per cent and National slumped to 37.4 per cent in the same poll as last night’s, the Newshub- Reid Research poll. But within four months, the same polling company had National back in the lead and the 2020 election looking like a neck-and-neck contest.

That is the hope that Bridges’ supporters will be clinging to.

They will be hoping to convince the 15 list MPs and those in marginal seats that National can again recover within four months.

They will be arguing that a bloody leadership fight would drag the party down further.

Polls as bad as this so close to an election tend to have a compoundin­g effect. It is harder to recover from a tail spin the closer the election.

But Bridges doesn’t have what he had last year — time. In fact he may have only one week.

Parliament is in recess this week and the National Party caucus meets next Tuesday.

There is likely to be one more public poll, 1 News’ Colmar Brunton’s, before then and if it also shows National set up for slaughter at the election, Bridges will be toast.

The only question is how much damage he does on the way out.

Bridges has survived for two reasons: He has held up the allimporta­nt party vote despite his failings, and there has been no clear replacemen­t.

There is still no clear replacemen­t; Judith Collins, Todd Muller, Mark Mitchell and even deputy leader Paula Bennett could all be possibles.

It should also be remembered that four of Bridges’ front bench — Bennett, finance spokesman Paul Goldsmith, health spokesman Michael Woodhouse and Alfred Ngaro — are list MPs and none would be returned to Parliament on current polling.

Bridges has vowed to stay on as leader but leaders always say that until the moment they go — as did Andrew Little seven weeks out from the 2017 election when he stood aside for Ardern.

Once Bridges is convinced he has lost the confidence of his caucus he will either go graciously or go down fighting, but either way he seems set to go soon.

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