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EDITORIAL:
Well, well, well… here we go again
The theatre, the pressure, the whispers, the leaks — and then bang — Christopher Luxon walks into caucus and says, “righto, let’s settle this.”
Yesterday, we asked for exactly that, didn’t we?
I said on this show, I wanted to see a bit of steel.
A bit of fight. Not the polished corporate lines, not the media training — I wanted to see a Prime Minister Christopher Luxon look like he was in charge.
And to his credit, that’s exactly what he did. He forced the issue. He didn’t let it drift. He didn’t let the knives keep circling in the dark.
Because just think about the significance of this for a second.
This is the first time a sitting Prime Minister has actually asked for a confidence vote.
First time ever and that matters. We’ve seen pressure like this before — opposition leaders, sure — but not from the top job.
Not like this. In the past, leaders like Geoffrey Palmer and Mike Moore, or Jim Bolger and Jenny Shipley, they were told they didn’t have the numbers. The writing was on the wall.
But they never forced the room to prove it. Luxon did.
He walked in and said, “look me in the eye — am I your leader or not?”
And here’s the follow-up question, no one’s really asking yet. What happens if the next poll drops… and it’s worse?
And the one after that… worse again?
Does this become the playbook now?
Every time the numbers dip, do we march back into caucus and demand another vote? Because that’s not strength — that’s instability dressed up as decisiveness.
And we’ll never know the numbers. Three-hour meeting, by all accounts.
Plenty of MPs getting up, speaking, backing him, positive vibes — that’s the line we’re getting fed.
And in the end, he’s still standing. He’s still the Prime Minister. So on paper, it’s a win.
But — and there’s always a but — what kind of win is it?
Because afterwards, when he walked out to face the media, it wasn’t the big united front we expected. No wall of senior ministers behind him showing overwhelming strength.
It was just him… and Nicola Willis.
And I’ve got to be honest — and I know people roll their eyes when I say this — but I watch body language.
She didn’t look comfortable. She didn’t look like someone who’d just come out of a rock-solid show of unity. It felt… off.
Now maybe I’m reading too much into it. Maybe that’s just the moment. But politics is theatre, and that moment told a story.
So where does that leave us this morning?
Is this the reset Luxon needed — the line in the sand, the moment he takes control and says “enough”? Or is this just round one of a longer fight that’s still bubbling away under the surface?
Because forcing the vote is bold. No question. But bold only works if it actually shuts things down.
Did it, or did it just expose how close this really is?
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