Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Australian PM puts foreign minister in charge amid government crisis

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Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull on Saturday appointed his foreign minister as acting prime minister as he tried to stem the fallout of a citizenshi­p crisis that has cost his government its parliament­ary majority.

Turnbull delayed until Monday a long-planned trip to Israel and held an emergency Cabinet meeting to shore up support after Australia's High Court ruled on Friday that his deputy, Barnaby Joyce, and four other lawmakers should be expelled from parliament because they held dual nationalit­y.

The court's shock decision had immediate ramifi- cations, stripping the coalition government of the one- seat majority it holds in the lower house, forcing it to call a by-election in Joyce's seat and sending the Australian dollar lower.

Turnbull said on Saturday that the deputy position would remain vacant until after the Dec. 2 by-election for Joyce's seat.

“Government goes on, good government goes on,” Turnbull told reporters in Sydney, dismissing suggestion­s that the inability to agree on a deputy indicated tensions within the coalition. Turnbull now needs the support of one of three independen­t law- makers to keep his minority government afloat.

Turnbull is under pressure after refusing demands from the opposition to remove Joyce, who has renounced his New Zealand citizenshi­p, from the cabinet while the court decided his fate. Turnbull said the court's interpreta­tion of the constituti­on, which bars dual citizens from parliament in a bid to prevent split allegiance­s, was “very strict” and “very hard”. He added that he was considerin­g whether to recommend a change to the constituti­on, noting that more than half of the country's population of 24 million was either born overseas or has a parent who was born overseas. “Our objective is to ensure parliament is open to everybody,” he said.

A referendum would be needed to change the constituti­on.

The High Court ruled on seven lawmakers, some of whom had already resigned. All seven accepted that they were dual nationals at the time of their election but claimed they were unaware of their status. Some were conferred a second nationalit­y by birth, others by descent. The others dismissed were all senators in the upper house and their seats can be assigned to party-appointed alternativ­es.

 ??  ?? Australian Deputy PM Barnaby Joyce reacts as he sits behind Australian PM Malcolm Turnbull in the House of Representa­tives. Reuters
Australian Deputy PM Barnaby Joyce reacts as he sits behind Australian PM Malcolm Turnbull in the House of Representa­tives. Reuters

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