Home Australia Australian Opposition Leader Sacks Senator Over Anti-Indian Remarks

Australian Opposition Leader Sacks Senator Over Anti-Indian Remarks

Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, a Liberal Party senator for the Northern Territory, singled out Indian immigrants during a radio interview last week.
Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, an Australian senator for the Northern Territory in the centre-right Liberal Party. Photo: Facebook/@JacintaNPrice

Australian Opposition Leader Sussan Ley on Wednesday dismissed a senator from her shadow ministry for making “deeply hurtful” remarks about Indian immigrants and subsequently refusing to support her leadership.

Jacinta Nampijinpa Price, a senator for the Northern Territory in the centre-right Liberal Party, singled out Indian immigrants during a radio interview last week.

Price, who held the portfolios of defence industry and defence personnel in the shadow cabinet, refused to apologise for the comments despite condemnation by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and members of her own party and the Indian community.

Price ‘Failed The Test’

Ley said she had sought Price’s resignation because she “failed the test” of high standards expected of a shadow minister.

“Senator Nampijinpa Price made comments that were deeply hurtful to Indian Australians,” she told a press conference on Wednesday.

“The comments were wrong and should not have been made. And despite being given the time and space to apologise, Senator Jacinta Nampijinpa Price did not offer an apology.”

In a statement, Price said she had accepted Ley’s decision and emphasised that she did not intend to disparage the Indian community but raise concerns over “the magnitude of migration”.

Price’s comments about one of Australia’s largest minority groups followed nationwide anti-immigrant protests that, in part, blamed Indian immigrants for cost-of-living pressures.

She suggested they were arriving in unsustainable numbers because they tended to vote for Albanese’s centre-left Labour Party.

In an earlier press conference on Wednesday, Price had vowed not to be “silenced” on immigration, and then refused to say whether she backed Ley’s leadership.

Hours later, Ley said, “Confidence in the leader is a requirement for serving in the shadow ministry.”

Price defected to the Liberal party from the Nationals following the defeat of Australia’s conservative opposition coalition in May’s general election.

(With inputs from Reuters)

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