Steve Martin takes seat in Senate as independent after fallout with Jacqui Lambie

Tasmanian mayor-turned-senator Steve Martin will vote as an independent after Jacquie Lambie ejected him from her party.

Tasmanian Senator-elect Steve Martin poses for photos in Canberra.

Steve Martin (File). Source: AAP

Steve Martin has formally occupied the Senate seat vacated by his former party leader, Jacqui Lambie, who the High Court kicked out of parliament for holding a dual citizenship last year.

A recent fallout led to Ms Lambie severing ties with Mr Martin and removing him from her Jacqui Lambie Network, which no longer holds any seats.

Ms Lambie said her former colleague should have shown "loyalty" and voluntarily abandoned the seat, opening the possibility of Ms Lambie making an early return to politics.



But Senator Martin, who is also the mayor of Devonport in Tasmania, decided to sit as an independent.

He will now be one of five crucial independent senators who will often hold the deciding vote on Turnbull government bills - along with Derryn Hinch, David Leyonhjelm, Cory Bernardi and Fraser Anning.  

Senators Bernardi, Anning and Leyonhjelm have already indicated they will generally vote together as a conservative bloc.


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Published 12 February 2018 11:09am
Updated 12 February 2018 11:57am
By James Elton-Pym


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