The Southland Times

Nats MPs must back Bridges

- Tracy Watkins tracy.watkins@stuff.co.nz

The report into the National Party leaks is far from conclusive in pointing the finger at Botany MP Jami-Lee Ross. But that no longer matters. Ross’ spectacula­r explosion on Twitter is not survivable. He accused the National leader of framing him. He alleged illegal and dodgy behaviour. And he admitted secretly recording Bridges during some of their meetings.

It is disloyalty on a grand and nearunprec­edented scale.

No MP can survive such an attack on his leader. Ross may or may not make good on his implied threat to take Bridges down. Until he produces the evidence he claims to possess, we can’t know.

But unless National MPs have a collective death wish, Ross will go down first, his suspension from the caucus seemingly a formality.

Bridges – and National – are on a precipice now. He needs his caucus to move swiftly, and decisively, against Ross to inoculate himself against further leadership speculatio­n.

Bridges needs it known that Ross was a lone wolf in his caucus, and not part of a pattern of destabilis­ing leaks and dissension.

Otherwise his leadership is doomed to fall to the usual death by a thousand cuts.

But it is not just Bridges who is standing on the precipice.

The National caucus must know it is on the edge as well; any hint of internal party splits and divisions would likely trigger the death spiral of the Opposition that will keep it out of power for years to come.

For many of National’s newer MPs, this is unfamiliar territory. But National’s older hands know the look and smell of those desperate times in the early 2000s when disunity and disloyalty tore the party apart and very nearly destroyed it.

On the surface, it looks as though Ross is acting as a one-man band, but the fallout from the leak inquiry had started to sow the seeds of doubt about Bridges’ judgment.

The leak of Bridges’ VIP travel bill had seemed like a one-day wonder, but instead it dragged on for weeks.

And the hunt for the leaker itself was a hugely risky exercise. It required his MPs to open up their phone and email records to the Pricewater­houseCoope­rs team hired by Bridges. That could be a breeding ground for grudges. The report that fingered Ross concluded he was most likely guilty by triangulat­ing his phone records to see whom he spoke to.

We know from the report that there were three other MPs whose phone records were also a cause for suspicion till they were cleared.

But the talk in caucus had honed in on Ross weeks ago, a long time before the inquiry was complete. If he escaped suspicion initially, it was because Ross and Bridges had been close.

Ross was Bridges’ numbers man in the recent leadership contest – despite previously having been seen as an ally of rival Judith Collins.

Bridges rewarded Ross with a huge promotion to the front bench and the prized transport portfolio. The promotion placed him in Bridges’ inner circle and gave him a key role in the party’s strategy and policy developmen­t.

But Ross wanted more, according to insiders, and demanded the role of Senior Party Whip as well, a position that pays extra.

Bridges was under pressure to share the spoils after getting pledges of support from MPs and said no.

If he escaped suspicion initially it was because Ross and Bridges had been close.

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