More
dirt on John Key that's likely to go nowhere
Key
met spy candidate for breakfast
Prime
Minister John Key had breakfast with Ian Fletcher just days after he
selected a panel to interview candidates for the country's top spy
job.
The
man brought in by Key to spy on Kiwis
24
April, 2013
The
pair ate together at Auckland's Stamford Plaza Hotel on June 17,
2011. Mr Key says the vacancy, as head of the Government
Communications Security Bureau, was not discussed.
Three
days earlier, Mr Key had signed off on an interview panel for the
job, which included then Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet
boss Maarten Wevers. Mr Fletcher was the only person to be
interviewed for the post, after a shortlist of four other candidates
was rejected.
In
the past month Mr Key's varying accounts of his relationship with Mr
Fletcher have been seized on by the Opposition.
Labour's
deputy leader, Grant Robertson, said: "Given the number of times
John Key's story has shifted, it's hard to believe that the [GCSB]
role did not come up."
Documents
released yesterday by State Services Commissioner Iain Rennie show it
was agreed on July 6 that a shortlist of four candidates, drawn up by
a recruitment consultant, was not suitable.
Mr
Key went on to make the controversial telephone call encouraging Mr
Fletcher, who was then working in Australia, to apply. He was
interviewed on July 26.
While
in New Zealand, Mr Fletcher met acting GCSB director Simon Murdoch,
Security Intelligence Service director Warren Tucker and Intelligence
Coordination Group director Roy Ferguson. The SSC said these
briefings were "usual" for candidates at this stage in the
recruitment process.
On
August 3, Rennie phoned Mr Key to offer an update following the
interview.
Consultancy
and other fees for the appointment process were almost $60,000, the
papers reveal.
The
documents include a Cabinet paper from August 2011 which recommends
Mr Fletcher's appointment. It makes no reference to Mr Key's
childhood acquaintance with Mr Fletcher. The pair attended the same
Christchurch school and their mothers were best friends.
A
spokeswoman for Mr Key says he "briefed Cabinet orally about his
knowing Mr Fletcher".
Mr
Robertson said the relationship should have been disclosed in the
Cabinet paper.
"He
also fails to mention that he called Ian Fletcher. It is a
continuation of his economy with the truth when it comes to this
appointment process," he said
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