Otago Daily Times

Kaye as well as Muller have lessons to learn

- AUDREY YOUNG

THERE is no single type of good deputy leader for a political leader but there is one type of bad deputy as Nikki Kaye and Todd Muller found out this week.

The bad deputy makes problems worse for the leader rather than better.

That’s not to say Muller didn’t author his own misfortune with his lack of preparatio­n for big media events. Winging it might work for the first five seconds.

When rightwing media figures such as Mike Hosking and Mark Richardson expressed their disappoint­ment at Muller’s failures this week, it cannot be written off as the Press Gallery making mischief.

But that Muller’s dream start was initially derailed by the fiasco over Maori representa­tion on the front bench and Paul Goldsmith’s whakapapa was in no small part by Kaye’s interventi­on.

She, as well as Muller, has some lessons to learn from the past week.

She emerged from the leader’s office with Todd Muller for his first corridor caucus run and, instead of being the usual ‘‘nodding head’’ — when MPs stand slightly behind the leader giving a press conference — she piped up several times uninvited, and offered the Paul Goldsmith nugget. He then backed up her claims.

It is not usually the way things work. It is meant to be the other way round.

Nikki Kaye is unlike any deputy National has had in the past 20 years because she cosponsore­d the coup against Simon Bridges as part of a joint ticket.

That has perhaps given her a greater sense of partnershi­p in the leadership team than the traditiona­l deputy.

Certainly she has a higher profile and one of the most commonly asked questions of Todd Muller in the two days following the coup was why Nikki Kaye wasn’t leader.

She had beaten Ardern twice in Auckland Central and had had more years’ experience in Parliament they said.

Kaye will never be National Party leader because she is too left wing to be a bridge within the party in the way that Muller can yet be.

She is a very intense, driven MP, some say obsessive, and has a legendary capacity to work hard on the issue at hand.

She also showed great strength in overcoming breast cancer when she was in John Key’s cabinet.

But within the party she is also a polarising figure because of her activism on socially liberal causes and that is more keenly felt now than ever because of the recent euthanasia and abortion debates.

There is a good reason Kaye has hung on to a seat that was a Labour stronghold for nearly 90 years and it’s not just hard work and personalit­y but because many of her values align with theirs.

Most deputy leaders in National are not a natural fit with the leader but have arrived in the job like an arranged marriage of convenienc­e. That was the case from 2003 until now.

That was true of Bill English becoming deputy to John Key and Paula Bennett to Simon Bridges.

Both English and Bennett had a small band of followers, not enough for them to win a leadership contest, but loyal enough to put their person into the No 2 spot for the price of a smooth transition.

Bennett brought enough support to keep Amy Adams out of the leadership in 2018.

Adams, who was strongly supported by Muller and Kaye at the time, has catapulted back to No 3 in what is almost a reversal of the 2018 contest.

The circumstan­ces of Todd Muller’s leadership change, however, militated against a smooth transition.

The Muller camp’s energy went into winning the vote, not the transition. And in the end, there is no way to completely prepare for the scrutiny that leadership brings, and the heightened expectatio­n of performanc­e that a coup brings.

Having enticed Amy Adams out of retirement plans to be by his side as he announced the reshuffle was an important image to project, not of unity, but of competence.

If Muller is going to try to make that the key point of difference with Labour, having Adams and Judith Collins, the most competent of Key and English’s ministers, so close is vital to the message.

Amy Adams at No 3 is almost deputy, and with responsibi­lity for Covid19 policies is almost finance spokeswoma­n.

But after all that has been said and done this week about whether Muller has a Maori on his front bench, the issue is not going to affect the bounce he will give to the National Party. That is not in doubt.

Those people for whom it is a gamechange­r were probably never National supporters.

And if Muller had shifted Shane Reti from No 28 to say No 8, it would have been seen as tokenism.

The more important impact was Muller’s failure to project a strong alternativ­e to the Government’s policies to respond to the Covid19 economic crisis, and his failure to say whether National would spend more or less.

Muller might be easier to listen to than Simon Bridges, he might be more ‘‘likeable’’, but he had nothing better to say this past week.

Muller is now attempting to get back some momentum. He made a fair fist of his appearance in a Business NZ webinar and even joked about ‘‘Atrocious Tuesday’’.

He released a small business policy in Auckland — a $10,000 grant for each new employee taken on after November — in what will be the first of policies over which he can claim ownership.

Amy Adams, Paul Goldsmith, Judith Collins were there in support, and he was in much need of a show of strength. So was Nikki Kaye — letting the leader lead.

 ?? PHOTO: OTAGO DAILY TIMES FILES ?? Applause greets Mrs Diane Hodgson, of Dunedin, who was chosen by the popular acclaim of 300 guests, from 25 entrants in a Green Island Plunket subbranch 197980 brides' competitio­n in May 1980.
PHOTO: OTAGO DAILY TIMES FILES Applause greets Mrs Diane Hodgson, of Dunedin, who was chosen by the popular acclaim of 300 guests, from 25 entrants in a Green Island Plunket subbranch 197980 brides' competitio­n in May 1980.

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