Newshub speculated tonight that Key had made some moves behind the scene in support of a Judith Collins leadership.
He would not confirm or deny that when spoken to by the Herald, saying :"I'm not involved in the leadership. That's for the caucus."
Key tonight said he would be attending the National Party conference in Christchurch in July.
Asked if he would be going to the conference to support Simon Bridges, as he had done last year, he said "Yes, to the National conference and yes, to support Simon."
This morning, Bridges was pressed multiple times to say the words 'I trust Judith Collins' but refused each time.
Instead, he opted to say he "trusts all his colleagues".
But when asked again three hours later, Bridges did explicitly say he trusted Collins.
"I trust Judith Collins. I have set her a task which is to get out there and go at it – she does that attack roll really well."
Asked what had changed between this morning and this afternoon, Bridges said the media were "over-analysing things".
"I felt confident now, I still do – I have a strong and united caucus."
This morning, Collins would not rule out a leadership bid – saying only that she had "no plans" to be the National leader "today, or in the near future that I'm aware of".
Although she said she has full support for the "National Party leader" she refused to say the words "I support Simon Bridges as National leader."
She said Bridges should trust her.
"I'm a very good person, a good member of the National Party and I do my job. I think everyone should just do their job."
Before going into National's caucus meeting this morning, Bridges said he was confident in his leadership and said he would be bringing up "the need for discipline".
This afternoon, he said he had made the need for unity and discipline clear.
He again said that he was "confident in his leadership and really confident we have a strong united team".
Speaking to The Herald, Collins said she was "very happy with my position. I'm very happy with the caucus."
She said she never talked about what happened within caucus, but repeated that fact she was a "very happy member of the National caucus."
Other National MPs were singing a similar tune.
When asked if National's leadership was discussed, the party's Deputy leader Paula Bennett said: "All is good with the National Party."
When pressed, she would not go into detail about what was discussed behind the closed doors of the caucus room.
National's MP for Tamaki Simon O'Connor would not comment about what happened during the caucus, but he did say Bridges' leadership was secure.
Although National MPs were staying tight-lipped, MPs from other parties were not short of an opinion.
"There is nothing as antiseptic as saying I told you so," NZ First leader, and Deputy Prime Minister, Winston Peters said.
"But a long time ago I did," he said in a nod to his previous comments that he thought Bridges would be rolled as National's leader soon.
"He's a nice bloke, but he's not up to it."
Even Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, who usually stays out of any conversations about National's leadership, had a crack at Bridges in the House, when he questioned her leadership.
"Raising leadership issues today; bold call Mr Bridges," she said in response to a question about her not being across the details of a KiwiBuild question.
Collins has been climbing in the preferred Prime Minister rankings and, in the most recent 1 News/Colmar Brunton poll, Collins and Bridges were both even.