Judith Collins can count herself lucky. Very lucky. Ministers have found themselves booted out of the Cabinet for much lesser crimes than the truly cardinal sin of misleading the Prime Minister.
John Key would have been well within his rights to demote her to National's backbenches after she admitted that she had not told him the whole story regarding her visit to China last year and her meetings with Oravida, the company whose directors include her husband.
Had Key been consistent in terms of punishing ministerial misdemeanours, he would have been ripping up her ministerial warrant and looking to someone else to run her Justice and ACC portfolios.
Not doing so has put the Prime Minister at risk of looking weak and inconsistent.
Key deliberately sought to counter that possibility by unceremoniously kicking down the ladder to Collins' lofty perch, from which she had been lambasting all and sundry who had the audacity to question the constitutional propriety of her behaviour and suggest she was guilty of a serious conflict of interest.