It was a sign of how worried Labour leader David Cunliffe was that he took the unusual step of cancelling his plans to spend yesterday in Auckland to return to Parliament where he could keep a close eye on his caucus, meet his front-bench MPs and try to halt speculation about his leadership.
Mr Cunliffe flew back to Wellington from Auckland yesterday morning in damage-control mode. He didn't bother pretending he'd always intended to be there, conceding he had cancelled a breakfast meeting with a West Auckland community group.
Instead, his day's work was to show he was not under threat after another dire poll result and revelations about his 2003 letter on behalf of Donghua Liu, despite denying he played any party in Liu's residency.
He took the Shane Jones approach of fronting up, albeit with defiance, rather than contrition. He did media interview after media interview. Then, he met his front-bench MPs. By the time he fronted the media again, just before Parliament began at 2pm, he had his senior MP Grant Robertson beside him. Mr Robertson was the centre of speculation around Mr Cunliffe's leadership as the person most likely to take over if there was a challenge.