By the same argument you could also move a lot of other programs to
/bin. In fact, the difference between / and /usr is pretty much out of
date nowadays, and unless you have very specific reasons, /usr doesn't
really need to be on a separate partition.

Anyway, if you need to repair a broken system you can start the rescue
mode from the boot manager, which will give you a root shell (apart from
some other useful tools, like repairing the packaging system, etc.).

Thanks for your report!

** Changed in: sudo (Ubuntu)
       Status: New => Won't Fix

-- 
sudo should be in /bin so that it is accessible when /usr is not mounted 
(repairs, etc)
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/394364
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