Judith Collins has brusquely rejected claims that visiting her husband's dairy company in China represented a conflict of interest. She had simply been assisting New Zealand Inc, as ministers were expected to do whenever they were overseas, she said. The Prime Minister lent support, saying the Cabinet Office had stated unequivocally that there had been no breach of Cabinet Manual rules. On that count, it may appear nothing untoward had occurred. If only it were so simple.
At best, the Justice Minister's actions during a visit to the offices of Oravida, a New Zealand company that exports milk products to China, were naive, careless and unwise. A translation of a Chinese-language report on the company's website says she tried Oravida's milk and "praised" it. Tackling this arena, the Cabinet Manual says: "No minister should endorse, in any media, any product or service."
According to the Cabinet Office, however, Ms Collins' comment does not mean she endorsed Oravida's product. Such incidents happened all the time, added the Prime Minister. "I go to a lot of things where I say I use your toilet paper, or whatever it might be, that's not deemed to be an endorsement."
Maybe so, but Ms Collins was naive if she believed the actions and comments of a Cabinet minister would not be used by the company to promote its products. Worse, this was not just any company. Ms Collins' husband, David Wong Tung, is a director, and Oravida donated more than $55,000 to the National Party in 2011. A cash cow.
A minister's role is a public one, and "appearances and propriety can be as important as an actual conflict of interest". In that context, Ms Collins' visit to Oravida smacks of carelessness.