‘Assault on democracy’:Wong blasted over election funding offer to Sogavare

Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare has launched an extraordinary attack on the Albanese government,blasting Australia’s offer to subsidise the Pacific nation’s elections as “an assault on our parliamentary democracy”.

Sogavare,who is seeking to delay next year’s scheduled elections by seven months,said Australia’s offer of financial assistance constituted “direct interference by a foreign government in our domestic affairs”.

Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare is seeking to delay his nation’s elections.

Solomon Islands Prime Minister Manasseh Sogavare is seeking to delay his nation’s elections.AP

Foreign Minister Penny Wong announced on Tuesday the government had formally offered to help fund Solomon Islands’ elections,saying Australia has a longstanding commitment to promoting democracy throughout the Pacific.

In an unusually strident criticism of the government,opposition foreign affairs minister Simon Birmingham accused Wong of grossly mishandling the issue by going public about the offer before receiving a reply from the Sogavare government.

Opposition foreign affairs spokesman Simon Birmingham said the government was right to offer financial assistance but “the execution of that offer appears to have been woefully undertaken”.

“The Solomon Islands are clearly aggrieved at the fact that this was made public,in the way it was made public,when it was made public,” he told reporters on Wednesday.

“And that’s why there are answers to be had from the Albanese Government about whether they informed the Solomon Islands in advance that they would be making the offer public in this way and,if not,why not?”

Sogavare’s broadside follows his signing earlier this year of acontroversial security pact with China and arecent decision to temporarily ban naval vessels from countries such as the United States from docking in the country.

Senior federal government sources have expressed concerns that Sogavare’s move to delay the elections represents a disturbing turn towards authoritarianism.

The Solomons leader is set to visit Australia in coming weeks and meet with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese.

Sogavare said the timing of Wong’s announcement ahead of an upcoming vote in the Solomons’ parliament on delaying the elections was “inappropriate”.

“The bill is set for the elected members of parliament to debate and vote on as required by the Constitution of Solomon Islands and NOT the Australian government to influence,” the government said in a statement.

“The timing of the public media announcement by the Australian government is in effect a strategy to influence how members of parliament will vote on this bill ... This is an assault on our parliamentary democracy and is a direct interference by a foreign interference into our domestic affairs.”

Solomon Islands’ government said it had expressed its concerns about the federal government’s conduct to the Australian high commission in the capital,Honiara.

Solomon Islands suspends foreign naval visits after US ship incident.

Sogavare has claimed the elections,held every four years,need to be delayed until 2024 because the Solomon Islands does not have the resources to host the Pacific Games and conduct a poll in the same time period.

Solomon Islands Opposition Leader Matthew Wale savaged the move as an orchestrated “power grab” designed to allow Sogavare to avoid a verdict by his nation’s voters.

Sogavare requires the support of two-thirds of the parliament to change the Solomons Constitution and delay the election. He is expected to have the numbers.

Wong said Australia’s offer to provide financial assistance to the Solomons reflected “a reasonably common approach that Australian governments have made over years”.

“It reflects our longstanding and historical commitment to supporting democracy and democratic processes in Solomon Islands,and we’ve previously offered support and we are offering support again,” she told ABC radio.

Wong,who visited Solomon Islands in one of her first overseas trips following Labor’s election victory,said she welcomed Sogavare’s recent assurances that Australia remained his country’s “security partner of choice”.

Cut through the noise of federal politics with news,views and expert analysis from Jacqueline Maley. Subscribers can sign up to our weeklyInside Politics newsletter here.

Matthew Knott is national correspondent for The Sydney Morning Herald,focusing on race,culture and identity. He was previously North America correspondent for the Herald and The Age.

Most Viewed in Politics