The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Nervous wait for Australia government over citizenshi­p crisis

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SYDNEY: Australia’s conservati­ve government will have to wait at least two months to discover if key members will survive a dual citizenshi­p crisis that has put its one-seat parliament­ary majority under threat.

Seven lawmakers from across the benches have so far run a foul of an obscure constituti­onal rule which bars dual citizens from parliament.

The Liberal-National coalition’s slim majority in the lower house is on the line after Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce discovered he had New Zealand citizenshi­p.

A court ruling disqualify­ing him could potentiall­y topple Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s government.

Five cases – Joyce, National Party senator Matt Canavan and three other senators from minor parties – were referred to the High Court, with the chief justice determinin­g that they would be heard on Oct 10-12.

“There is an obvious public urgency in relation to this matter to clarify the situation,” AttorneyGe­neral George Brandis told reporters.

“We look forward to the speedy resolution of the matter.”

Brandis said the court would examine seven cases during the three-day seating in Canberra.

The total includes another two senators caught out by the law, the Nationals’ Fiona Nash and independen­t Nick Xenophon.

The government had hoped the hearing would occur in September to dispel uncertaint­y created by its biggest crisis since it was returned to power in mid2016.

The saga began in July, when Greens co-deputy leader Scott Ludlam resigned after revealing he had dual Australian-New Zealand citizenshi­p.

Other politician­s followed, including Canadian-born Greens senator Larissa Waters and Canavan, who stepped down as resources minister after finding his mother signed him up to Italian citizenshi­p in his 20s.

Australia-born Joyce – the leader of the rural-based Nationals – earlier this month found out he had automatica­lly acquired New Zealand citizenshi­p through his Dunedin-born father.

Nash, Xenophon and Indianborn One Nation senator Malcolm Roberts have also been under a British citizenshi­p cloud.

Xenophon told Sky News on Wednesday he wanted a citizenshi­p audit of all lawmakers, adding: “If I’m in strife, then there will be dozens of others in strife in the parliament.”

Despite the cloud hanging over his government, Turnbull has repeatedly expressed confidence that the High Court would not disqualify the politician­s. — AFP

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