CANBERRA: A second Australian senator in less than a week said on Tuesday she was quitting Parliament after discovering she was a dual national and had therefore never really been elected.
The controversy has raised questions about how many other lawmakers might also have no right to be there.
Larissa Waters, co-deputy leader of the minor Greens party, said she was quitting after six years as a senator after the Canadian High Commission in Canberra told her on Monday that she was Canadian.
On Friday, the Greens’ other co-deputy, Scott Ludlam, revealed that he was a citizen of New Zealand as well as Australia, which made him ineligible for the Senate job he’s held since July 2008. Australia’s constitution states that a “citizen of a foreign power” is not eligible to be elected to Parliament.
Waters, who in May became the first lawmaker to breastfeed in Parliament, was born in the Canadian city of Winnipeg on Feb 8, 1977, to Australian parents. She moved to Australia before her first birthday.
She said she thought she had an option of becoming a Canadian citizen and did not take it. She has since found that the law changed a week after she was born, meaning she automatically became a Canadian unless she took steps to prevent it.
Waters said other foreign-born lawmakers among the 226 in Parliament could find themselves in a similar predicament.
“There are many politicians in the Senate and the federal House of Representatives that were born overseas and it may well be that others have to make this embarrassing revelation as well,” an emotional Waters told reporters.
Published in Dawn, July 19th, 2017
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