It's got to be Bridges. Has to be, must be, because then I can enjoy a told-you-so moment and we can all sit back and enjoy the show.
On January 20, the Herald published my annual survey of the coming year in satire. I wrote, "One of the tests of an Opposition is to make a government look laughable. I'd be mighty grateful for any assistance in this regard from National, though I don't know if slow-thinking Bill English would be much help.
"Simon Bridges, though, has already achieved that goal, when he famously had Labour MPs running headless and clueless within seconds of the swearing-in ceremony. I hope he becomes National's next leader. I've always liked his company. The Leader of the Opposition ought to operate as satirist-in-chief, and Bridges is sharp, prosecutorial, and very funny."
We first met at a literary function in Tauranga. Literary functions can bring out ministers and MPs in a rash, and it's easy to see why: many literary functions are unbearable. They're a little bonfire of the vanities, a lot of people standing around thinking they're better than everyone else - better, certainly, than ministers and MPs, who are routinely thought of as barbarians.
Two former arts ministers, Chris Finlayson and Maggie Barry, attended these kinds of functions under duress. Barry did her best to grin and bear it; the effort brought out dark rings under her eyes. Finlayson didn't even bother with the niceties. But Bridges sailed into the room in Tauranga with a big smile on his face. He was completely at ease, and didn't give a monkey's when the occasional guest tried giving him the liberal death stare.