Opposition leader Simon Bridges says a deal with the Green Party over Question Time in the House is not the dawning of a potential National-Green coalition partnership.
But he has welcomed the move and says it will help his party hold the Government to account.
Yesterday Green Party co-leader James Shaw said the party would gift most of its primary oral questions to National, reserving the right to keep them if the Greens have hard questions to ask of the Labour-NZ First coalition.
Shaw said patsy questions - where a minister is asked an inane question to prompt an answer about how well the Government is doing - were a waste of time, and National could use the Green Party's 42 primary questions for the rest of the year to improve democracy.
Bridges told Newstalk ZB this morning that the party would use the Greens' questions in the spirit in which they were given, even if that meant turning them back on the Greens to ask hard questions of its ministers.