The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Australia’s deputy PM loses support of state branch amid sex scandal

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SYDNEY: A state branch of the Australian National Party has pulled its support for Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce because of his extramarit­al affair, its leader said yesterday, opening a new rift in the ruling coalition.

Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, who introduced a ban on sexual relationsh­ips between ministers and their staff on Thursday, said Joyce had shown a “shocking error of judgment” by conducting an affair with his former press secretary, who is now pregnant.

Joyce, the National Party’s federal leader, has refused to resign, maintainin­g he has the support of his party.

But the Western Australian branch of the party disagreed.

“I have today contacted Barnaby Joyce to inform him he no longer has the support of the Parliament­ary National Party of Western Australia as the Leader of the Federal National Party,” Western Australia state leader Mia Davies said in a statement.

“Mr Joyce’s actions have caused pain for his family but it is the ongoing damage Mr Joyce is causing the Nationals’ organisati­on that is of greatest concern to me.”

As the National Party leader, Joyce is automatica­lly deputy prime minister under the convention­s of a century-old coalition between his rural party and the conservati­ve Liberals.

The move adds fuel to a political storm which has held newspaper front pages for weeks. Joyce, who rose to global attention by deporting two undeclared dogs owned by actor Johnny Depp in 2015, has campaigned as a Catholic with traditiona­l family values.

Still, none of the 16 National Party members of Australia’s 150-seat federal parliament is from Western Australia so a loss of support from a state branch with no federal parliament­ary presence would not destabilis­e a government despite its majority of only one seat.

“I find it surprising that a federal issue has so much momentum in the west when people in the east in the National Party have, in the majority, a different view and ... vastly more skin in the game,” the Sydney Morning Herald quoted Joyce as saying.

Two-thirds of Australian voters want Joyce to resign over the affair, according to The Australian newspaper’s Newspoll, and there is concern that disapprova­l could lead to fewer votes in state-based elections.

Veteran West Australian political analyst David Black said it was unusual for the state branch to withdraw support for a federal leader.

 ??  ?? Barnaby Joyce
Barnaby Joyce

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