Mercury (Hobart)

Shorten offers peace treaty on citizenshi­p

- COLIN BRINSDEN

OPPOSITION Leader Bill Shorten is offering the Federal Government a “peace treaty” over the citizenshi­p crisis that has embroiled seven MPs and senators, and left Malcolm Turnbull’s one-seat majority hanging in the balance.

The Labor leader said cabinet ministers Barnaby Joyce and Fiona Nash should stand aside until the High Court decides their fate but he is willing to discuss the matter with the Prime Minister.

However, he’s suggested if there is a controvers­ial vote to be had in Parliament, it should wait until the High Court has made its decision.

“I think Australian­s want to see this government focusing on them, not these legal and political games,” Mr Shorten said yesterday.

Attorney-General George Brandis expects High Court hearings will not happen until October.

Senator Nick Xenophon, the latest Australian politician caught up in the dual-citizenshi­p scandal, has described it as a “festering farce” and attacked his opponents for spending hours trying to knock him off.

The crossbench senator revealed he was a British overseas citizen by descent as a result of his father emigrating to Australia from a British territory.

His news came after deputy Nationals leader Senator Nash revealed on Friday she was a UK citizen by descent, the third member of Mr Turnbull’s cabinet to be affected.

Senior Nationals MP Darren Chester conceded it had been a “rotten few weeks” for his party.

“We need to be better at our vetting process when people nominate to be a candidate,” he said.

The parliament has already referred Nationals senator Matt Canavan, Greens senators Larissa Waters and Scott Ludlam, One Nation senator Malcolm Roberts, as well as Mr Joyce, the Deputy Prime Minister and Nationals leader, to the High Court, which will have a directions hearing on the matter on Thursday, where the timetable of should be laid out.

“The Commonweal­th will be asking the court to deal with the matter urgently,” Senator Brandis told Sky News.

While the court will sit in September, he thinks that realistica­lly the issue won’t be heard until October.

Senator Xenophon said Mr Joyce’s decision not to stand down was causing disruption in the House of Representa­tives, where Labor has tried to force the Government to stand Mr Joyce aside. proceeding­s

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