The Borneo Post

Influentia­l Xenophon resigns

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SYDNEY: Australian Senator Nick Xenophon, a key independen­t lawmaker, said yesterday he was resigning from national politics, potentiall­y complicati­ng Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull’s efforts to pass legislatio­n.

Turnbull does not have a majority in the Senate and has relied on Xenophon’s party, the fourth largest bloc in the upper house, to pass legislatio­n.

Xenophon’s replacemen­t will come from his party, which bears his name, but is likely to be a far less experience­d compared with Xenophon’s nine years as a Senator.

Xenophon’s future as a Senator was under a cloud due to him holding possible dual citizenshi­p with Britain. Under the constituti­on a lawmaker must only hold Australian citizenshi­p to be eligible to be elected to the national parliament.

Xenophon had renounced his Greek citizenshi­p, which he received from his mother, but had not been aware he held possible British citizenshi­p. While he was born in Australia, his father was born in Cyprus, which was a British colony until independen­ce in 1960.

Xenophon’s citizenshi­p issue was due to be determined by Australia’s High Court.

Australia’s High Court will next week rule on the eligibilit­y of seven politician­s, including Xenophon and Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce. Should Joyce be ruled ineligible, Turnbull will lose his majority in the lower house.

In announcing his surprise resignatio­n, Xenophon said he would stand for election in his home state of South Australia next year. State parliament­s do not have the same citizenshi­p rule as the national parliament.

“I have increasing­ly concluded that you can’t fix South Australia’s problems in Canberra without first fixing our political system at home. South Australia politics is broken and politicall­y bankrupt,” Xenophon told reporters in Adelaide.

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