When news broke of the Mayor's two-year affair with Bevan Chuang, this newspaper suggested that if Len Brown's family could forgive him then the city should, too.
Two months on, that sentiment is no longer sustainable. An issue far more important than the mayor's private life is now at stake. Tomorrow, Auckland councillors will not only formally censure Mr Brown but begin a process designed to clip the wings of the mayoral office. If that happens, the Super City may no longer have a leader with the independent authority to drive things forward. The only means of avoiding that outcome is for Mr Brown to resign. He must go in the interests of Auckland and Aucklanders.
Everything that has happened in the past few days underlines that conclusion. We have waited until the EY review was released, heard the mayor's explanations and apologies, and witnessed the councillors' response. There can be only one judgment. The EY review into his conduct, commissioned by the council chief executive, did not condemn him outright. But nor did it save him. It did nothing to lessen the certainty that Mr Brown will remain a running gag at barbecues and Christmas gatherings around the city over coming weeks - and beyond. Going into next year, however, the joke will be on all of us if the Super City governance is compromised.
The corrosive nature of all this is compounded by doubts that remain and the questions still unanswered - not least in relation to the reference for a job at the Auckland Art Gallery that he provided for Ms Chuang, and his trip to Hong Kong. There is also the foolishness of his free night and upgrades at Sky City while he was advocating the national convention-centre deal.