The Labour Party is deluding itself if it thinks it has a choice when it comes to electing David Shearer's replacement as leader.
There is only one option. He may wear his super-sized ambition on his sleeve. He may have an over-inflated opinion of his own worth. He may be extremely unpopular in some quarters of the Labour caucus. He may even self-destruct as leader.
But David Cunliffe's time has finally arrived. There are plenty of reasons. But one stands out from the rest. His being Labour's leader worries National far more than Grant Robertson, the only other viable contender, getting the job.
Cunliffe is the closest thing Labour has to an X factor.
That is not to belittle Robertson, whose capacity to do the job is not in question. But Robertson is a left-leaning party technocrat from the Wellington metropolis who has yet to prove he is more than a Beltway politician and - regardless of him being gay - can make an impact in provincial New Zealand.