COMMENT:
Opposition Leader Simon Bridges has been loudly and sometimes rightly critical of the number and cost of the inquiries set up by the Government since it came to office. Why, then, has he caused an inquiry to be set up that trumps any for triviality?
Bridges called for a full independent inquiry into a leak of his parliamentary travel expenses which were always going to be made public yesterday, and Parliament's Speaker, Trevor Mallard, has agreed. A Queens Counsel no less is to be paid to try to trace who in Parliament Buildings might have slipped the information to a Newshub reporter.
Mallard said, with as straight a face as he can manage, "The security of members' personal information, until it is made public, is something which I think is very important... Members of Parliament and the public have to have certainty that the information they share with their whips and with the Parliamentary Service is cared for with integrity."
Members might agree with him, the public probably does not. His solicitude for the public is entirely misplaced. Some of the public will be mildly interested in the size of the bill Bridges has presented to the Parliamentary Service, almost none are likely to care that the figure got out a little earlier than intended. Parliament is an intimate political environment, politicians cannot expect complete control over personal information the public has a right to know.