Oman Daily Observer

9th lawmaker quits as citizenshi­p crisis widens

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SYDNEY: A ninth Australian lawmaker quit parliament on Wednesday after discoverin­g she was a dual national, the latest casualty in a widening constituti­onal crisis that has already cost the government its majority.

The resignatio­n of Skye Kakoschke-Moore, one of three senators in the centre-right Nick Xenophon Team, over the surprise revelation that she was a British citizen by descent, does not affect the government’s position in the upper house.

“Their advice was extremely surprising to me,” KakoschkeM­oore told reporters in Adelaide, after having learnt from Britain’s Home Office that her mother’s birth in then-colonial Singapore in 1957 made her British by descent.

Australia’s 116-year-old constituti­on bans dual citizens from holding national office, in a bid to prevent split allegiance­s.

The crisis, which is likely to ripple even wider in coming weeks as lawmakers are required to prove their status, has already cut a swath through Australia’s parliament.

The ruling centre-right coalition lost its one-seat majority in the lower house after Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce was found ineligible for office and expelled by the High Court. Another resignatio­n has since weakened it further.

Adherence to the dualcitize­nship rule, in a country where more than half the population of 24 million were either themselves, or have a parent, born overseas, has only recently come under the spotlight, with the High Court adopting a strict interpreta­tion of the law. In response, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull ordered all lawmakers to prove they comply with the laws by December 5, and at least one lawmaker besides those who have quit has raised the possibilit­y that she is ineligible.

 ?? — Reuters ?? Skye Kakoschke-Moore announces her resignatio­n at her office in Adelaide on Wednesday.
— Reuters Skye Kakoschke-Moore announces her resignatio­n at her office in Adelaide on Wednesday.

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