It starts with a media report, then proceeds in ritualistic fashion: initially there are denials; the MP and party officials believe they have no issue around their eligibility. That belief, it turns out, isn’t backed by evidence; the “checking” that they’ve done proves cursory or non-existent or an exercise in firing off emails to non-existent addresses. Embassies and High Commissions are contacted — the UK High Commission in Canberra must now have a full-time case officer to handle citizenship requests — and more often than not, the news from the diplomats is not good.
While the government and the opposition haggle over the details of a self-reporting scheme in the register of pecuniary interests, the drip of cases continues. John Alexander awaits the call from the Brits; Jacqui Lambie could be a Scot; Jason Falinski might be a Pole; Pauline Hanson is mentioned in dispatches — hilarious if true, a second senator from a passionately anti-immigration party turfed out for being the descendant of migrants — Labor MPs who renounced their citizenship before election might be caught out anyway. The ravenous section 44 demands ever more political blood, to be fed by the High Court, through the portals of which lies a corner of some foreign field that is forever England/New Zealand/Canada, wherein a growing number of political careers lie interred.
That Bill Shorten entered yesterday’s meeting with the prime minister to settle terms and emerged shaking his head, disappointed that he couldn’t be satisfied with the rigour of the mechanism proposed by Malcolm Turnbull — you could have bet your house on that. The party that watched Tony Abbott run the most cynical program of oppositionism in recent political history wasn’t about to forgo the chance to make the prime minister sweat a little, to take the opportunity to appear tougher on transparency than the Coalition. But there’ll be an agreement of some kind, and soon. The rivalry here really isn’t between the government and the opposition, but between the politicians and the media, with the latter racing to unmask the next alien in our midst. To keep mixing the metaphors, it’s like Invasion of the Body Snatchers, but it’s we who do the communal shrieking, not the aliens.
The High Court decision — one way or the other — was meant to rule a line under all this. If Turnbull could get the Court to sign off on the plebiscite, then the citizenship of Barnaby Joyce, Fiona Nash and Matt Canavan, then steer through the marriage equality legislation, he would have some hope of clear air heading into 2018. And even after the decision, with Tony Windsor out, Joyce looked a safe bet in New England; as for Nash, well, no great loss, and the government even got permanently furious man-child Matt Canavan approved and ready to resume his role of sitting in the corner in cabinet meetings licking a piece of coal. But Stephen Parry blew it all to hell; the push for an audit of some kind — no matter how the terminology was parsed — became irresistible and more by-elections, seemingly, inevitable. Turnbull, who must, along with his few competent ministers like Mathias Cormann, Simon Birmingham and Scott Ryan, surely take a daily break in a soundproof room and indulge in some primal screaming about all this, had little choice.
So now there could be a round of by-elections next year if the High Court wields the axe on some Reps MPs on both sides, not to mention yet further recounts as the Senate shuffles personnel — there’ll be four new senators sworn in next week and a new president, while we wait for Richard Colbeck to come back from the Phantom Zone into which Eric Abetz thought he’d banished him. The outlying possibility, once unthinkable, is of an early election. That, in turn, changes the dynamic around Turnbull’s leadership: 2018 no longer stretches out as a substantial period in which Turnbull can — with the help of some of that fabled “clear air” — mount a recovery effort and build the Coalition primary vote back to 40%; the carnage that polls suggest Queensland and Western Australian voters are ready to inflict on Coalition ranks might instead be Coming Soon in the New Year.
That might concentrate some minds about who can “save the furniture”. Which, at the moment, isn’t the incumbent.
Deja vu! Emerging possibility of an early election. All about politicians; scrabbling for an advantage and ‘to hell’ with any concern for nation or the peoples.
Equity, fairness, accountability, transparency. No more than a desperate illusion.
old trumble keeps hitting himself on the head with his right wing hammer then complaining about his headache, this bloke is either totally stupid or just that spineless that he does`nt want to see what he`s doing to the nation, old silly billy McMahon was a macho hero compared to this jelly backed lump of fairy floss, its a marvel how he manages to stay upright without the semblance of a spine, still most of his party and their supporters manage without a brain.
Apparently, the LNP were sick of their idea of “reformist” judges on the High Court, and have appointed successive judges seen to be “black letter law’ judges. Now these judges have stuck to black letter law, and politically cruelled the LNP. Even The Abbott couldn’t have inflicted this level of damage.
For all those who recall the daily speculative media fever of Rudd mounting a challenge against Gillard, and the Dr No Reject Everything approach of the LNP in opposition, schaudenfraude has never been so sweet.
Oh how the worm has turned. Even Morrison has been heard to mention – in passing – that there is such a thing as good debt. Only after years of his accusations that it was all due to ALP spending, and after economists have – largely politely – mentioned that the deficit has doubled during the LNP term. Wasn’t that their own measure of performance?
Call an election!
Why would I or any other immigrant with dual citizenship want to vote in an election in which we as second-class Australian citizens are not permitted to stand.
I say we immigrants should boycott any election until this complete debacle is sorted and we have equal rights with other Australians.
David, you are permitted to stand. Just conform with Constitutional requirement (and be honest about it) and ensure your paperwork is in order. No worries mate. Of course you will have to accept you will be in the minority and have to accept compliance thereafter will require abandonment of values like honesty, etc
There’s a lot of deliberate confusion on this. Dual citizens are allowed in parliament once they have made all reasonable efforts to relinquish other than Australian citizenship.
But in the normal course of events, don’t dual citizens have more rights than single Aust citizens, ie to visit there other home and live there?
If I’m not mistaken they also have the advantage of opting for the shortest queue at Customs & Immigration checkpoints.
I have a cunning plan, thinks MT….
First you force Bill Shorten in a wasteful and humiliating TURC investigation, making him sit and undergo three days of torrid cross-examination, consisting of about 900 questions, and every one of them questioning his integrity and fitness for public office – and then find bugger all to show for it. After that fails, you again drum up the coppers and raid union offices in order to smear Shorten once more over a 11 year-old donation that had already been declared (after first sicing the media on the aforementioned raid by the responsible government minister).
Now, you appeal to that same abused opposition leader for “bipartisan cooperation” on s44(i) just because your own party is making you walk the plank over a tub of excrement.
Am I missing anything? That’s your winning plan, Malcolm?
Exactly! What a total waste of space.