Turnbull’s govt loses grip on Parliament
SYDNEY: Embattled Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull lost his grip on Parliament when another of his coalition’s members of parliament resigned yesterday, the latest victim of a constitutional crisis over politicians who hold dual citizenship.
Former tennis star John Alexander, who represented a Sydney district for Turnbull’s Liberal Party, announced he was resigning after being unable to determine if he had inherited United Kingdom citizenship from his immigrant father.
His resignation followed an Oct 27 ruling by Australia’s High Court that forced five other politicians to quit Parliament because they had fallen afoul of a previously obscure constitutional rule that bars dual citizens from sitting in the Senate or lower house.
The five included deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce, leader of the rural-based National Party, which rules in a coalition with the Liberals.
When Parliament convenes tomorrow without Alexander, Turnbull will control only 74 of the 150 seats in the House of Representatives, with the opposition Labour Party holding 69. Minor parties and independents fill the remaining seats.
Labour frontbencher Tony Burke vowed yesterday to heap pressure on the government by pushing legislation opposed by Turnbull’s coalition but supported by independents.
“No matter which way you look at it on the floor of Parliament, this is now a government without a majority. It’s a prime minister without authority,” he said.
Turnbull brushed aside the likelihood of a no-confidence vote or setback on key legislation.
“There is no question of that happening,” he said in Danang, Vietnam, where he was attending a regional summit.
In announcing his resignation, Alexander said the High Court ruling had forced him to examine his own citizenship status, even though he was born in Australia.
“I have always believed that I am Australian and solely Australian,” he said at a press conference.
“I can no longer, with sufficient certainty, maintain the belief that I have held for 66 years,” said Alexander, who played tennis professionally in the 1970s and 1980s, at one point rising to world No. 8. AFP