WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange, a thorn in the side of the U.S. government thanks to
his posting of classified information, will run for a seat in the Australian
Senate in spite of being held in the United Kingdom on house arrest. His
organization posted the
development on Twitter. The question of whether Assange can succeed in his bid
is a good one. On one hand, he has repeatedly been convicted of crimes
involving hacking and some people consider him to be ahigh-tech terrorist. At
the same time, he's a master at getting media attention and many people applaud
his efforts to make governments more transparent. Assange, who was born and
raised in Australia, is waiting to find out if he will be extradited to Sweden,
where two women have accused him of sexually
assaulting them in 2010. According to The Register, Assange's
entry into the political arena was inevitable.
Wikileaks also posted on Twitter that it is looking for a candidate to run
against Prime Minister Julia Gillard for her seat representing the Australian
state of Victoria. Assange has criticized Gillard for not defending him after
WikiLeaks made thousands of classified U.S. embassy cables public in 2010. Even
though Australian police said he hadn't broken any Australian laws by doing it,
Gillard called the action "grossly irresponsible," reports The Independent. Assange won an
Amnesty International Media Award for publicizing extrajudicial killings in
Kenya, was chosen by Time Magazine readers as 2010 Person of the Year and last
year was nominated for a Nobel
Peace Prize. John Wanna, an Australian National University political scientist,
said Assange likely won't prevail in his bid, but that he could receive more
than 4 percent of the votes in his nominated state because of his high profile,
reports The Washington Post. Assange
also would likely need backing from a major political party, which could be
problematic considering his controversial image.
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