The Star Malaysia

Australian PM pushes for lawmakers to declare citizenshi­p

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SyDNEy: Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull has announced plans to force all lawmakers to declare they are not dual nationals as he seeks to defuse a political crisis that saw his deputy ejected from parliament.

Turnbull’s centre-right coalition government was thrown into disarray last month when the High Court ruled that five lawmakers who were dual nationals, including Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce, were ineligible for parliament.

The Australian leader has been facing down calls since for a full audit of parliament­arians to ensure they comply with the country’s constituti­on, which bars foreign nationals from sitting in parliament to prevent split allegiance­s.

The High Court ruling expelled three members of the LiberalNat­ional coalition government from parliament, while a fourth resigned days later after confirming he also had dual nationalit­y.

The other affected lawmakers were from minority parties, with the main Opposition Labor Party yet to be ensnared.

Turnbull said yesterday his plan, unlike an audit, would put the onus on lawmakers to check their own situation and anybody found to have made a false declaratio­n would be in contempt of parliament.

Lawmakers will be required to produce documents to prove any second citizenshi­p has been renounced.

“Members and senators have been put squarely on notice now and so they will be turning their mind to their own affairs and the issues of citizenshi­p,” Turnbull told reporters in Canberra.

The new laws will apply to both existing and prospectiv­e lawmakers.

Those already in parliament would be given 21 days to make a declaratio­n from the date it comes into force, while new lawmakers would have the same period of time from their swearing-in.

Turnbull said he hoped to push the changes through parliament in the last remaining sitting days this year.

That will require support from the Labor Party, which suggested a similar plan last week.

Turnbull has said previously that the court’s interpreta­tion of the constituti­on was ”very strict”.

He has flagged potential changes to the constituti­on, noting that more than half of Australia’s population of 24 million was either born overseas or has a parent who was born overseas.

A referendum would be needed to change the constituti­on.

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