The New Zealand Herald

Collins could be kingmaker

- Audrey Young

It is said to be better to be equipped with a lie detector than a calculator if you want to predict the outcome of a political leadership contest, as those experience­d in them can attest.

The 2003 National spill when Don Brash unexpected­ly ousted Bill English as leader was the most notable for recriminat­ions over who had broken whose pledge of support to the incumbent.

One certainty is that most MPs will vote according to one criterion, selfintere­st, or which candidate is more capable of saving their bacon in the September election — incumbent Simon Bridges or challenger Todd Muller.

Last night’s 1 News Colmar Brunton poll should not make today’s decision any easier for the National caucus given that it is almost the same result as Monday’s Newshub Reid Research survey, 29 per cent in Colmar Brunton to 30.6 per cent in Reid’s.

But it almost certainly will.

The psychologi­cal effect of slumping from the 40s into the 20s may swing a few votes in Muller’s favor.

Although that does not mean he will necessaril­y win.

What might save Simon Bridges is the backing of Judith Collins.

She does not have enough support to be a contender herself, but she has the satisfacti­on of knowing that she has enough supporters to influence the outcome.

Collins is also one of only two or three of the caucus who experience­d the devastatio­n of 2002 on National.

It is very difficult to recover from the 20s as English knows, and as Labour’s Andrew Little knows from 2017 when he stood aside at about 25 per cent and in free-fall.

Jacinda Ardern was Labour’s circuit-breaker but Todd Muller is no Jacinda Ardern.

Simon Bridges did not surmount the challenges under the Covid-19 crisis and the adulation heaped on Ardern but he had withstood the pressures of leadership until then.

People may find Bridges so unlikeable that he cannot sell National’s message.

But Muller is completely untested in high-pressure politics and could falter as the highly likeable David Shearer did under the high expectatio­ns set by his caucus.

One of the questions the caucus may be asking is which of them will inflict the least damage on the party.

A close result in favour of Muller will leave an unhappy and potentiall­y destabilis­ing rump of Bridges supporters.

A close result in favour of Bridges will undermine his leadership credential­s up to the election.

The contest itself may be damaging enough to keep the party in the 20s.

There will be risks either way. A dice might be better than a lie detector or a calculator.

Jacinda Ardern was the circuit-breaker [for an ailing Labour in the 2017 election] but Todd Muller is no Jacinda Ardern.

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