Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Australian senator ‘devastated’ to discover he’s actually not a senator

Scott Ludlam speaks to the media in this 2015 file photo. Mick Tsikas/EPA/AP

CANBERRA, Australia — The deputy leader of an Australian political party announced Friday that he was ending his nine-year career in Parliament because he had discovered he had technically never been a senator.

Story continues below advertisement

Scott Ludlam, the 47-year-old deputy leader of the minor Greens party, said he was “personally devastated” to learn that he was a citizen of New Zealand as well as Australia, which made him ineligible for the Senate job he has held since July 2008.

READ MORE: Sinkhole opens close to Australian prime minister’s home

The constitution states that a “citizen of a foreign power” is not eligible to be elected to the Australian Parliament.

The daily email you need for 's top news stories.

While lawmakers have discovered they were technically ineligible after elections in the past, Ludlam said nine years later seemed to be a record.

“I apologize unreservedly for this,” Ludlam told reporters. “This is an oversight that was avoidable and it’s something I should have fixed up in 2006 when I first nominated.”

READ MORE: Australian PM says Trump travel ban doesn’t affect passport holders after teen denied entry to US for school trip

Born in in Palmerston North in New Zealand, Ludlam moved to Perth, Australia, when was 3 years old. He became an Australian as a teenager and said he hadn’t realized that New Zealand citizenship “might be something that sticks to you in that way.”

Story continues below advertisement

He was elected to the Senate three times after stating in nomination forms on each occasion that he was not a dual citizen.

He joked: “I can at least vote in the New Zealand elections in September.”

The government could demand Ludlam repay millions of dollars in salary and expenses that he has claimed since 2008.

“I’m hoping common sense prevails,” Ludlam said. “If I’d known all along this was the case and I’d just been sprung, maybe they would have a case, but this is as much of a surprise to me as it was to anybody else.”

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article