Fiji Sun

By-election could cost Australian govt power

- Reuters Feedback: jyotip@fijisun.com.fj

Melbourne: Australia’s conservati­ve coalition government is at risk of losing power after a new poll revealed the opposition Labor Party is neck-and-neck in a knife-edge by-election triggered by a constituti­onal crisis.

A by-election is being held in the Sydney seat of Bennelong after government member of parliament John Alexander was forced to resign after he declared he held dual British citizenshi­p.

Under the Australian constituti­on, dual citizens cannot hold federal office. Mr Alexander is among eight Australian politician­s who have left parliament because of dual citizenshi­p.

The coalition government is hanging onto power by just one seat. If it loses the Bennelong by-election, it will be plunged into minority government.

A second by-election is being held in Queensland state but the government is widely expected to win that one.

Mr Alexander has renounced his British citizenshi­p and is standing in the December 16 by-election for his old seat.

Labor candidate Kristina Keneally, a former high-profile New South Wales premier, is polling 50-50 with him in two-party preferred polls. Mr Alexander, a former tennis champion, is leading by just three percentage points in the primary vote; that is more than eight percent down on his primary vote when he won the set in a general election in July last year.

The poll, published in the Saturday Telegraph, shows the Labor Party snatching a 10 percent swing, meaning it could win the seat and be in striking distance of being in a position to form a government. Labor Party leader Bill Shorten has declared the by-election a referendum on the government’s performanc­e, which has been hit by internal fights, poor poll performanc­es and widespread criticism over its handling of policy on asylum seekers.

 ??  ?? Bill Shorten.
Bill Shorten.
 ??  ?? John Alexander.
John Alexander.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji