WELLINGTON (Reuters) - Two senior New Zealand ministers threw their support behind Finance Minister Bill English on Wednesday, underpinning his front-runner position in the race to replace John Key, who announced his shock resignation this week.

New Zealand Finance Minister and Deputy Prime Minister Bill English speaks to members of the media in Wellington, New Zealand, December 5, 2016 to announce he is considering running for the leadership of the ruling National Party after the surprise resignation of Prime Minister John Key. REUTERS/Charlotte Greenfield

Social Services Minister Paula Bennett and Transport Minister Simon Bridges said they were both running to become deputy leader and would back English’s leadership bid.

English, who is also deputy leader of the ruling center-right National Party, announced his candidacy on Tuesday after Key’s resignation statement on Monday.

Health Minister Jonathan Coleman and Police Minister Judith Collins have also put their names forward.

Other contenders, such as senior cabinet minister Stephen Joyce, may yet still emerge before the party holds a caucus meeting on Monday to vote for a new leader.

“Bill does look in a very strong position to take this,” said Jon Johansson, political scientist at Victoria University in Wellington.

Several cabinet members, including Immigration Minister Michael Woodhouse and Primary Industry Minister Nathan Guy, have declared their support for English.

A recent UMR survey of voters pegged English as favorite to replace Key on 21 percent, followed by Joyce on 16 percent, Bennett on 11 percent and Collins on 6 percent. Coleman was not ranked in the survey, which was conducted in early October, but said he had youth and energy on his side.

National elections are not expected until late 2017.

Key has been New Zealand’s leader since 2008 and the National Party is part way through a third, three-year term that has been marked by political stability and economic reform.

Some questioned whether the clamor over the leadership contest pointed to more turbulent times for the National Party.

New Zealand First Leader Winston Peters, with whom the National Party may need to strike a deal to form a parliamentary majority after the 2017 election, traded jabs with Key on Wednesday in parliament.

“All we’re hearing from ... the spills coming out of caucus is terrible instability, feuding, backstabbing, fighting,” Peters said.

Key laughed off the attack, pointing toward opposition parties and saying: “We actually have a capable caucus in which we actually know each other and like each other, quite a bit different from over there.”