She left as
an 11-month-old baby and has never again set foot on Canadian soil.
At age 21,
she had the choice to take up Canadian citizenship and did not exercise this choice, effectively confirming
her “Australianism”.
Her parents
were of the opinion this was all she needed to do in order to be considered
Australian, and at the time of her birth, it was. Canadian Citizenship law changed
a week after she was born.
In good
faith, on behalf of the Australian Green Party Larissa Waters stood for election to the
Senate in 2011 and was successful. She was again successful at the 2016
election.
She resigned
today having discovered that at age 21, instead of simply not taking up
Canadian Citizenship, she should have formally denounced it.
The
eligibility rules for Federal Parliamentary Candidates are clearly defined as
part of our Constitution. They even make sense, although arguably less so now than when they were drafted over 116 years ago.
Larissa
Waters should not have stood for election without first denouncing her Canadian dual
citizenship.
However, I don’t think
anyone is suggesting her nomination for election was in anything other
than Good Faith.
Despite
being ineligible, her Senate vote has been cast in literally hundreds of cases (in good
faith) and will stand.
The Greens
will wear criticism over her situation, particularly as it is their second such
case in a matter of days. Their Federal Parliamentary Leader Richard Di Natale,
has already said the Party will revise its Governance processes to ensure it doesn’t
happen again.
In my
opinion, the Australian Electoral Commission should be charged with confirming
the eligibility of all candidates before they appear on a ballot paper. No
candidate should be able to present to the electorate seeking our vote without
first being independently confirmed as eligible.
At the last
election, former Australian Democrats Leader, Andrew Bartlett was in second
position on the Greens Senate ticket in Queensland. It would be reasonable to
assume he would have been in first place had Waters been discovered as
ineligible. Given the low appeal former Australian Democrats have when running
for office under the banner of another Party (think Cheryl Kernot), I doubt he
would have attracted the vote Larissa Waters did.
We have had
two Green Senators resign within a week, both because they were ineligible to
stand in the first place. Both have served terms in excess of 6 years and
had significant influence on the floor of the Senate.
Laws have been passed, Bills amended and reforms rejected on their vote.
This is too
important to leave to individuals to understand the nuisances of the
citizenship details of their country of birth.
The
Australian Electoral Commission needs to assume responsible for confirming the eligibility of all
candidates and resourced accordingly so they can do so.
We, the
Electorate, deserve nothing less.
No comments:
Post a Comment