For a man who has always craved respectability, having his political career end with the words "guilty as charged" must be particularly galling for John Banks.
The Act MP was accused of filing a false electoral return during his 2010 Auckland mayoralty bid and, despite his confident assertions that the courts would see him vindicated, the judge preferred to believe that Banks did know where his campaign cheques came from and that he'd broken the law.
Interestingly, and astoundingly conveniently, the judge on Thursday did not enter a conviction against Banks. Instead, he ordered him to be sentenced on August 1, one day after Parliament is scheduled to rise to prepare for the September election. Banks' lawyer has indicated he will be applying for a discharge without conviction but even without a guilty verdict against his name, it's a sad end for a man with a 34-year political career behind him, even sadder than becoming an Act MP.
The cynical expediency of a well-known political and social conservative joining forces with a desperate, struggling political party with a neo-liberal ethos can only be equalled by the cynicism of Mana and the Internet Party jumping into bed.