The Asian Age

Nationalit­y row brews Down Under

Aussie Dy PM caught in dual citizenshi­p crisis after New Zealand declares he is Kiwi

- ROD MCGUIRK,

Australia’s deputy prime minister on Monday became the latest lawmaker to reveal he might have breached a constituti­onal prohibitio­n on dual citizens becoming lawmakers after the New Zealand government declared he was a kiwi.

Barnaby Joyce told Parliament he would become the fifth lawmaker to be referred to the high court since last month for scrutiny over whether he was entitled to remain in Parliament.

Joyce, who leads the conservati­ve Nationals minor coalition party, said he had legal advice that he would be cleared by the court and would not stand down from Cabinet.

The 116-year-old section of the constituti­on that bans dual nationals is taking an extraordin­ary toll on the finely balanced Parliament elected in July last year. Before the careers of five came under a cloud since July, only two elected lawmakers were caught. Both were elected in late 1990s and were quickly disqualifi­ed by the high court, the first over New Zealand citizenshi­p and the second for being British.

Critics of the constituti­onal rule argue it no longer suits the modern multicultu­ral Australia in which almost half the population was born overseas or has at least one overseas-born parent.

If Joyce was disqualifi­ed, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull's center-right government could lose its single-seat majority in the House of Representa­tives where parties need a majority to govern. The other four lawmakers are senators who if disqualifi­ed would be replaced by members of their own parties.

Joyce said he was notified by the New Zealand high commission on Thursday that the New Zealand government had discovered “I may be a citizen by descent of New Zealand.” “Needless to say, I was shocked to receive this informatio­n,” said Joyce, whose father migrated from New Zealand in 1947. Joyce was born in Australia in 1967.

New Zealand Prime Minister Bill English said he was told last week that Joyce was a New Zealand citizen.

“Unwittingl­y or not, he's (Joyce) a New Zealand citizen and then it's a matter for the Australian system to decide how Australian law applies in his case and how they deal with the issue,” English said.

The Australian opposition demanded that the government refuse to accept Joyce's vote in Parliament and dump him from Cabinet until the court resolved his status. But Turnbull said he was confident that Joyce was eligible to sit in Parliament.

“We did not refer this matter to the court because of any doubt about the Member for New England's (Joyce's) position, but because of the need, plainly in the public interest, to give the court the opportunit­y to clarify the operation of the section (of the constituti­on) so important to the operation of our Parliament,” Turnbull told Parliament.

The citizenshi­p crisis first took hold in Parliament when two minor Greens party senators, Scott Ludlam and Larissa Waters, quit days apart after discoverin­g they were still citizens of their birth countries. Ludlam was born in New Zealand and Waters was born in Canada. Both left as children and made no efforts to secure citizenshi­p other than Australian.

Turnbull accused the Greens of “incredible sloppiness” in vetting candidates, before senior government minister Matt Canavan announced that he had discovered he was Italian.

Australia-born Canavan, who said his mother applied for his Italian citizenshi­p without his permission when he was aged 25, stood down as resources minister, but said he was staying in the Senate unless the court declares them ineligible.

Joyce temporaril­y shouldered Canavan's portfolio and became a vocal supporter of his Nationals colleague.

“The problem is not with the New Zealand citizenshi­p laws but rather with the Australian constituti­on,” NZ minister of internal affairs Peter Dunne said.

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