It has to be said that if losing one minister is a misfortune, losing another looks like carelessness.
Yesterday John Key fronted yet again on the resignation of a support party minister - this time Act leader John Banks.
Key had little choice but to accept Banks' resignation, just as Banks really had little choice but to offer it.
Key has made much of holding his ministers to high standards and a failure to do that for Banks would have reeked of political convenience.
Key's primary aim yesterday was to make reassuring noises about the stability of his Government. Those assurances may be true, at least for now. Banks has pledged to support National on confidence and supply. United Future leader Peter Dunne did the same when he resigned as a minister after refusing to hand over emails to the Prime Minister's inquiry into the leak of a GCSB report to Fairfax reporter Andrea Vance.