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Reuters
Reuters
Politics

Australian citizenship crisis claims another lawmaker

Britain's Prime Minister Theresa May meets market traders with Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull during a visit to Borough Market, London, Britain July 10, 2017. REUTERS/Niklas Hallen/Pool

SYDNEY (Reuters) - A citizenship crisis that robbed Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull of his one-seat majority will claim another politician, with the Senate president on Wednesday saying he will resign after confirming he was a dual national.

Stephen Parry, the leader of the upper house and a member of Turnbull's Liberal party, said he will submit his resignation on Thursday after he being told that along with his Australian citizenship he also held British citizenship by descent.

Parry's father was born in Britain before moving to Australia as a boy in 1951, which automatically gave Parry citizenship by descent.

Under the constitution a politician must only hold Australian citizenship to be eligible to be elected to the national parliament.

"I wish my successor all the best and trust that she or he will continue the reforms that I have commenced," Parry said in a statement.

Parry's resignation follows last week's High Court ruling that the deputy prime minister, Barnaby Joyce, was ineligible to sit in parliament as he held dual Australia-New Zealand citizenship when elected.

The ruling meant the government lost its one-seat majority in the lower house and must now rely on independents for its political survival.

Joyce has since relinquished his New Zealand citizenship and will re-contest his seat at a Dec. 2 by-election.

Joyce was one of a group of lawmakers, known as the "Citizenship Seven", whose eligibility to sit in parliament was thrown into doubt in recent months when it was found they were dual citizens.

The High Court last Friday also ruled four other politicians ineligible to sit in parliament due to dual citizenships.

Turnbull does not control the Senate, and Parry's departure will not change the dynamics of the upper house where seats are assigned to party alternatives when an incumbent resigns.

Turnbull has flagged potential changes to the constitution, noting that more than half of Australia's population of 24 million was either born overseas or has a parent who was born overseas. A national referendum would be needed to change the constitution.

(Reporting By Jane Wardell; Additional reporting by Colin Packham; Editing by Gareth Jones and Michael Perry)

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