The Borneo Post

Australian citizenshi­p crisis claims another lawmaker

-

SYDNEY: A citizenshi­p crisis that robbed Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull of his one- seat majority will claim another politician, with the Senate president yesterday saying he will resign after confi rming he was a dual national.

Stephen Parry, the leader of the upper house and a member of Turnbull’s Liberal party, said he will submit his resignatio­n today after he being told that along with his Australian citizenshi­p he also held British citizenshi­p by descent.

Parry’s father was born in Britain before moving to Australia as a boy in 1951, which automatica­lly gave Parry citizenshi­p by descent.

Under the constituti­on a politician must only hold Australian citizenshi­p to be eligible to be elected to the national parliament.

“I wish my successor all the best and trust that she or he will continue the reforms that I have commenced,” Parry said in a statement.

Parry’s resignatio­n follows last week’s High Court ruling that the deputy prime minister, Barnaby Joyce, was ineligible to sit in parliament as he held dual Australia-New Zealand citizenshi­p when elected.

Therulingm­eantthegov­ernment lost its one- seat majority in the lower house and must now rely on independen­ts for its political survival.

Joyce has since relinquish­ed his New Zealand citizenshi­p and will re- contest his seat at a Dec 2 by- election.

Joyce was one of a group of lawmakers, known as the ‘Citizenshi­p Seven’, whose eligibilit­y to sit in parliament was thrown into doubt in recent months when it was found they were dual citizens.

The High Court last Friday also ruled four other politician­s ineligible to sit in parliament due to dual citizenshi­ps.

Turnbull does not control the Senate, and Parry’s departure will not change the dynamics of the upper house where seats are assigned to party alternativ­es when an incumbent resigns.

Turnbull has fl agged 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 national referendum would be needed to change the constituti­on. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia