Wednesday, April 17, 2024

Ninth Australian Lawmaker Quits as Citizenship Crisis Widens

Tom Westbrook
November 23, 2017 | 4:00 am
SHARE
Nick Xenophon Team (NXT) Senator Skye Kakoschke-Moore leaves after announcing her resignation at a NEWs conference at her office in Adelaide, November 22, 2017.  (Reuters Photo/AAP)
Nick Xenophon Team (NXT) Senator Skye Kakoschke-Moore leaves after announcing her resignation at a NEWs conference at her office in Adelaide, November 22, 2017. (Reuters Photo/AAP)

Sydney. A ninth Australian lawmaker quit parliament on Wednesday (22/11) after discovering she was a dual national, the latest casualty in a widening constitutional crisis that has already cost the government its majority.

The resignation of Skye Kakoschke-Moore, one of three senators in the center-right Nick Xenophon Team, over the surprise revelation that she was a British citizen by descent, does not affect the government's position in the upper house.

"Their advice was extremely surprising to me," Kakoschke-Moore told reporters in Adelaide, after having learnt from Britain's Home Office that her mother's birth in then-colonial Singapore in 1957 made her British by descent.

Australia's 116-year-old constitution bans dual citizens from holding national office, in a bid to prevent split allegiances.

The crisis, which is likely to ripple even wider in coming weeks as lawmakers are required to prove their status, has already cut a swath through Australia's parliament.

The ruling center-right coalition lost its one-seat majority in the lower house after Deputy Prime Minister Barnaby Joyce was found ineligible for office and expelled by the High Court. Another resignation has since weakened it further.

Adherence to the dual-citizenship rule, in a country where more than half the population of 24 million were either themselves, or have a parent, born overseas, has only recently come under the spotlight, with the High Court adopting a strict interpretation of the law.

In response, Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull ordered all lawmakers to prove they comply with the laws by Dec. 5, and at least one lawmaker besides those who have quit has raised the possibility that she is ineligible.

Senate votes from 2016 will be recounted to decide on a replacement for Kakoschke-Moore.

By-elections set for Dec. 2 and Dec. 16, to replace Joyce and a lower-house government lawmaker who resigned on discovering he was British, are shaping as crucial for the government's survival.

Joyce is expected to retain his seat, internal party polling published by the Australian newspaper showed, but former tennis champion John Alexander must contend with a high-profile rival in former New South Wales state Premier Kristina Keneally.

The government would be reduced to minority rule if Alexander lost, forcing it to depend on a handful of independent lawmakers to retain power and pass laws.

Reuters

Tags: Keywords:
SHARE

POPULAR READS


Business 2 hours ago

Nissan to Make Next-Generation EV Batteries by Early 2029

Solid-state batteries are widely seen as the next step for EVs.
News 5 hours ago

Airlangga Set to Extend Leadership in Golkar After Election Success

Under his leadership, Golkar rose to the second position in the legislative polls and successfully made Gibran the elected vice president.
Business 5 hours ago

Yellen Says Iran's Actions Could Cause Global 'Economic Spillovers' 

Iran's missile attack on Israel early Sunday came in response to what it says was an Israeli strike on Iran's consulate in Syria.
News 8 hours ago

Takeaways from Prabowo's Responses to Legal Motion Contesting His Election Win

Part of the argument addresses the claim that the candidacy of Gibran Rakabuming Raka, Prabowo’s running mate, is unlawful. 
News 8 hours ago

Prabowo Camp Cites ‘Procedural Error’ in Legal Challenge by Rival Candidates

The Constitutional Court's main task is to address alleged discrepancies in vote tallies, which neither of the plaintiffs challenged.
COPYRIGHT © 2024 JAKARTA GLOBE. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED