Khaleej Times

Voters ‘troll’ Aussie MPs for Queen portraits

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sydney — Australian politician­s have been inundated with “tongue in cheek” requests for portraits of Queen Elizabeth after a writer uncovered an obscure law allowing voters to request one at taxpayers’ expense.

Under the Constituen­ts’ Request Programme, Australian­s can ask their MPs for “nationhood material” including a photo of the Queen wearing a wattle brooch — a gift from former Australian prime minister Robert Menzies — and a pin featuring the country’s coat of arms.

The Queen is Australia’s head of state as it remained a British dominion after gaining independen­ce in 1901.

Other material on offer includes the national, Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander flags, “nationhood documents” such as booklets on Australian flags and national symbols, and a portrait of the Duke of Edinburgh.

MPs said they had not received any requests for Queen Elizabeth portraits — until Vice’s Nicholas Lord pointed out the archaic provision in an article on Wednesday.

“Excellent trolling @VICEAU, I do find this to be comfortabl­y the dumbest part of my job,” tweeted Labor MP Tim Watts, representi­ng the Victorian seat of Watts Gellibrand.

“But be warned youth of Gellibrand: if you request a portrait of Liz, there’s nothing stopping me sending you some other ‘material’ in the same parcel.” The “other material” in his package included photos of retired Aussie Rules’ Western Bulldogs captain Bob Murphy and former Australian Labor PM Julia Gillard.

Watts told the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n he had received four dozen requests for portraits of the Queen in 24 hours after the Vice article was published. “I think 99 per cent were tongue firmly in cheek,” he added. Another Victorian Labor MP, Ged Kearney, tweeted that while her office did have portraits of the Queen available, she usually received more requests for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander flags. —

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