WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange plans to run for a seat in the
Australian Senate in elections due next year despite being under virtual
house arrest in England and facing sex crime allegations in Sweden, the
group said Saturday.
The 40-year-old Australian citizen is
fighting extradition to Sweden. He has taken his legal battle all the
way to Britain’s Supreme Court, which is expected to rule on his case
soon.
“We have discovered that it is
possible for Julian Assange to run for the Australian Senate while
detained. Julian has decided to run,” WikiLeaks announced on Twitter.
Assange has criticized Australian
Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s center-left government for not standing
up for him against the potential threat of his extradition to the United
States for prosecution over WikiLeaks’ release of hundreds of thousands
of classified U.S. documents.
Australian police have concluded that
WikiLeaks and Assange have not broken any Australian laws by publishing
the U.S. cables, although Gillard has condemned the action as “grossly
irresponsible.”
John Wanna, an Australian National
University political scientist, said it was possible for Assange to run
for a Senate seat if he remains on the Australian electoral roll despite
living overseas for several years.
“If he gets on the roll, then he can stand as long as he’s solvent and not in jail and not insane,” Wanna said.
Being convicted of a crime punishable
under Australian law by 12 months or more in prison can disqualify a
person from running for the Australian Parliament for the duration of
the sentence, even if it is suspended.
Constitutional lawyer George Williams
of the University of New South Wales said that provision of the
constitution has never been tested in the courts in the 111-year history
of the Australian federation and probably would not apply to a criminal
conviction in a foreign country such as Sweden.
“I’m not aware of an impediment to him standing, even if he was convicted,” Williams said.
Any adult Australian citizen can run
for the Australian Parliament, but few succeed without the backing of a
major political party. Only one of Australia’s 76 current senators does
not represent a party.
Every Australian election attracts
candidates who have little hope of winning and use their campaigns to
seek publicity for various political or commercial causes.
Wanna said the odds are against
Assange winning a seat, but that he could receive more than 4 per cent
of the votes in his nominated state because of his high profile. At that
threshold, candidates can claim more than $2 per vote from the
government to offset their campaign expenses. Assange’s bill to the
taxpayer could reach hundreds of thousands of dollars.
The next Senate election cannot be
called before July 2013 and is due around August. Candidates cannot
officially register as candidates until the election is called at least a
month before the poll date.
Assange’s mother, Christine Assange, a
professional puppeteer from rural Queensland state, said Saturday she
had yet to discuss her son’s political bid with him.
She criticized what she called the
government’s willingness to put its defence treaty with the United
States ahead of the rights of an Australian citizen.
“The No. 1 issue at the next election
regardless of who you vote for is democracy in this country — whether
or not we’re just a state of the U.S. and whether or not our citizens
are going to be just handed over as a sacrifice to the U.S. alliance,”
she said.
source: thestar
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