May 05, 2023
Why Nearly All the King’s Realms Want to Say Goodbye and Good Riddance
The era of warm, wave-and-smile relations between the British monarchy and its distant realms has come to an end. Many of the former colonies that still formally swear allegiance to King Charles III are accelerating efforts to cut ties with the crown and demanding restitution and a deeper reckoning with the empire that the Royal Family has come to represent. Jamaica is moving rapidly toward a referendum that would remove King Charles as the nation’s head of state, with a reform committee meeting regularly on the verdant grounds where colonial rulers and slave owners once lived. , , and nearly every other country with similar systems of constitutional monarchy have also signaled support for becoming republics completely independent of Britain in the years to come. The chorus of calls for British apologies, reparations and repatriation — of everything from to — has also , placing the new king in a vexing position. Charles represents nearly 1,000 years of unbroken royal lineage; he also now stands on a volatile fault line between Britain, where much of that history tends to be romanticized, and a group of forthright former colonies demanding that he confront the harsh realities of his country’s imperial past. “There is a growing gap between Britain’s perception of its own empire and how it’s perceived everywhere else,” said William Dalrymple, a prominent historian of British India. “And that gap keeps growing.” For countries still constitutionally joined to the crown, Charles’s coronation arrived with little fanfare, and some cringing discomfort. These nations are but a remnant. In the wave of decolonization that followed World War II, dozens of independent countries climbed out from under British rule, including India, Pakistan and Nigeria. During Elizabeth’s seven-decade reign, which began in 1952, 17 former colonies left the monarchy’s embrace to become republics — in most cases, with a president replacing the Queen as head of state, usually in the ceremonial role previously played by the monarch (India) or with stronger executive powers (Kenya). The 14 nations yet to do so stretch from Australia and Papua New Guinea to Canada and Jamaica. In some places that call the new 74-year-old sovereign their king, like the Solomon Islands and Tuvalu, there seems to be little interest in severing royal bonds. Oaths of allegiance have already been switched from queen to king in the courtrooms of remote capitals where wigs are still worn . But for many royal subjects in faraway places, words like “his majesty” and “royal” — as in the Royal Australian Air Force — roll less easily off the tongue now that Britain is less dominant on the global stage, and now that the monarch is no longer Queen Elizabeth II, who often seemed as irreplaceable as Big Ben. A few governments have already endorsed a soft fade. Quebec passed in December that made the oath of allegiance to the king optional for lawmakers. Australia also recently announced that its new five-dollar note would replace the portrait of Elizabeth not with Charles but with imagery celebrating the country’s Indigenous heritage. But for critics of monarchy and empire, these are baby steps when bold leaps are needed. Nova Peris, an Aboriginal Australian Olympian and former politician who is a leader of the Australian Republic Movement, which aims to replace the British monarch with an Australian head of state, is one of many calling for a deeper reckoning with the past. English settlers justified seizing Australia by declaring it — a Latin term for “land belonging to no one.” It was a slur used to justify dispossession, and the impact still lingers. No treaty has ever been signed between the Australian government and Aboriginal nations. Later this year, Australians will vote on a referendum that would give Indigenous Australians an advisory role in policies affecting their communities. And that many hope a vote on becoming a republic will be next, arguing it would tilt the nation more toward its neighbors in Asia and help unify Australia’s increasingly multicultural population. “Monarchy is all about entrenched privilege, about rule by kings and queens over and above the Australian people,” Ms. Peris said. “It has no place in a democracy.” In Jamaica, the process of separation from “Mother England” is further along, and more imbued with demands for restitution. The Caribbean island was a center of the trans-Atlantic slave trade; Jamaican leaders began calling for reparations from Britain a few years ago, along with . After Queen Elizabeth died in September, Jamaica’s prime minister announced that his government would seek to change the constitution and make Jamaica a republic. In March, a committee of lawmakers and international experts started gathering in Kingston to work out the details. Richard Albert, a committee member and the director of constitutional studies at the University of Texas at Austin, said that at the first meeting, the gravity of the moment clarified the challenges ahead. The group now meets regularly to discuss what question to ask voters in the referendum, what role the Jamaican head of state would play, and what other changes might follow becoming a republic. “There’s a sense of national duty and pride,” Mr. Albert said. “It’s the idea that the country wants to exercise self-determination to celebrate its cultural heritage, and to plant a flag to say: We are an independent sovereign state.” Many Jamaicans have said they hope becoming a republic would lead to broader changes, with schools, courts and other institutions stepping away from quiet respect for British traditions and instead including more candid accounts of crimes committed by colonizers swearing loyalty to the British crown. On the campus of the University of the West Indies on a recent afternoon, many students described Charles as an unknown, distant figure — almost a cardboard cutout from the past. “The monarchy is something that should just stay in England,” said Tamoy Campbell, who is studying law. “For us to move forward as a nation, it’s important that we break away from those ties, to charter our own destiny, our future and our goals” Charles has said he does not object to such pursuits. Last June, at a meeting of the Commonwealth, a voluntary association of 54 nations, almost all of which were once under British rule, he declared that any constitutional connection to his family “depends solely on the decision of each member state.” He also noted that the group’s roots “go deep into the most painful period of our history.” Last month, , he signaled support for deeper research into the royal family’s connections to slavery through the royal archives. Historians welcomed the move. “That’s quite a new step because the archives are private archives,” said Robert Aldrich, an emeritus professor of history at the University of Sydney and co-author of “The Ends of Empire: The Last Colonies Revisited.” But how much can or will the king actually rectify? “He’s constrained,” Professor Aldrich said. “He must say and do only what is approved by the British government.” British laws from returning plundered artifacts. Even an apology for slavery would raise questions about whether the government, the royal family or businesses owed compensation, and it may be politically impossible. The families of some Kenyan victims of colonial abuse are instead the British government in the European Court of Human Rights. “There is still a widespread sense of pride in Britain about an empire that is perceived as being a good and progressive force that brought railways, Cricket and democracy to half the world,” Mr. Dalrymple said. “And there’s very little awareness in Britain of the pile of skulls over which that was rolled.” But there are hints of a shift. Books critical of British rule, such as “ , a British journalist born to Indian Punjabi parents, have become best-sellers. Mr. Dalrymple’s book “The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company” will soon that he has compared to “Game of Thrones.” For Charles, that means the realms he rules over may all soon become even more engaged with a sharper version of the history his family helped shape. And with that, his reign may be judged more critically than his mother’s ever was — by British elites who believe much of their wealth came from their benign civilizing of a grateful world, and by former colonies that bear the scars of and want their loot and patrimony returned. “There is friction now in a way that there simply wasn’t as recently as five or 10 years ago,” Mr. Dalrymple said. “Within Britain, there’s a whole lot of stuff that we don’t know and that we haven’t come to terms with.” Camille Williams contributed reporting from Kingston, Jamaica.
Related Stories
Latest News
Top news around the world
Russo-Ukrainian War

The Russo-Ukrainian War has been ongoing between Russia and Ukraine since February 2014.

Russia's war in Ukraine has proven almost every assumption wrong, with Europe now wondering what left is safe to assume.

Around the World

Celebrity News

> Latest News in Media

Media
Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet serve PDA at 2023 U.S. Open
Sep 10, 2023
Originally appeared on E! Online Kylie Jenner and Timothée Chalamet are bouncing together from coast to coast as their romance heats up. The Kylie Cosmetics founder and the Oscar-nominated actor served some PDA while sitting together in the stands at Arthur Ashe Stadium in New York City to watch the U.S. Open matches Sept. 10, the final day of the 2023 tennis championships. Jenner, 26, and Chalamet, 27, were photographed watching the tournament with their arms around each other and in a video shared on the U.S. Open’s X (formerly Twitter) account, she also appeared to stroke his hair. The two wore black outfits on their tennis date, which marked their third outing in a week. The “Kardashians” star and the “Wonka” actor had also twinned in black two days prior when they made their joint New York Fashion Week debut at a private, star-studded dinner celebrating French designer Haider Ackermann’s first beauty collab with Augustinus Bader. They Dated? Surprising Star Couples Following multiple reports in April that said the two are dating, Jenner and Chalamet were photographed in public for the first time Sept. 4 at Beyoncé’s Renaissance World Tour concert in Los Angeles, where they also spent time making out. Also in attendance at the show: Jenner’s ex, Travis Scott, with whom she shares daughter Stormi Webster, 5, and son Aire Webster, 19 months. Jenner and Chalamet have not commented on the nature of their relationship. During their PDA-filled outing at the U.S. Open, the two sat behind Laverne Cox. Many other celebs attended the tournament that day and last week. This story uses functionality that may not work in our app. Click here to open the story in your web browser.
READ MORE
Watch It
Jared Leto Says They Created "200 Songs" For New Album | E! News
September 13, 2023
fi7sBCMmf1g
Flashback: Beyoncé's 2008 Seventeen Magazine Interview | E! News
September 13, 2023
0NfdQ7uqlwM
Megan Thee Stallion & Justin Timberlake Laugh Off Feud Rumors | E! News
September 13, 2023
Y-k8GbRsmr0
Sean Penn on How He Filmed Zelensky the Day After the First Bombs Dropped on Ukraine
September 13, 2023
glipEcny5Bc
#TaylorSwift and #NickiMinaj hug on the red carpet at the #MTV #VMAs
September 12, 2023
nktkOV1GYuA
#kaliii has no hoes in her current area code "roster is empty right now"
September 12, 2023
qrw7NzPkfiA
Tom Brady's Basketball Workout & Messi's $10.8M Mansion Purchase | TMZ Sports Full Ep - 9/12/23
September 13, 2023
XBXZxQ0ajLQ
'Special Forces' Star Tyler Cameron Says Tom Sandoval Has Good Heart | TMZ Exclusive
September 13, 2023
UW2u75pcSws
'Special Forces' Star Tyler Cameron Says Tom Sandoval Has Good Heart | TMZ
September 13, 2023
jFnyt8MMCT0
Selena Gomez packs a punch in purple corset minidress at VMAs 2023 afterparty #shorts
September 13, 2023
Rh1pauZ_Q_U
Kristin Cavallari plays coy as Andy Cohen presses her over Morgan Wallen date on ‘WWHL’
September 13, 2023
1d2aJxIp2po
WATCH: Matthew McConaughey gives Joy Behar a ‘dad’ foot massage on ‘The View’ #shorts
September 13, 2023
TanGuA7NsfE
TV Schedule
Late Night Show
Watch the latest shows of U.S. top comedians

Sports

Latest sport results, news, videos, interviews and comments
Latest Events
03
Sep
ENGLAND: Premier League
Arsenal - Manchester United
03
Sep
SPAIN: La Liga
Osasuna - Barcelona
03
Sep
ENGLAND: Premier League
Liverpool - Aston Villa
03
Sep
ITALY: Serie A
Empoli - Juventus
03
Sep
ITALY: Serie A
Inter Milan - Fiorentina
02
Sep
GERMANY: Bundesliga
Borussia Monchengladbach - Bayern Munich
02
Sep
SPAIN: La Liga
Real Madrid - Getafe
02
Sep
ENGLAND: Premier League
Manchester City - Fulham
02
Sep
ITALY: Serie A
Napoli - Lazio
02
Sep
ENGLAND: Premier League
Chelsea - Nottingham Forest
02
Sep
ENGLAND: Premier League
Burnley - Tottenham Hotspur
01
Sep
ITALY: Serie A
Roma - AC Milan
01
Sep
GERMANY: Bundesliga
Borussia Dortmund - Heidenheim
28
Aug
SPAIN: La Liga
Rayo Vallecano - Atletico Madrid
28
Aug
ITALY: Serie A
Cagliari - Inter Milan
27
Aug
ITALY: Serie A
Napoli - Sassuolo
Find us on Instagram
at @feedimo to stay up to date with the latest.
Featured Video You Might Like
zWJ3MxW_HWA L1eLanNeZKg i1XRgbyUtOo -g9Qziqbif8 0vmRhiLHE2U JFCZUoa6MYE UfN5PCF5EUo 2PV55f3-UAg W3y9zuI_F64 -7qCxIccihU pQ9gcOoH9R8 g5MRDEXRk4k
Copyright © 2020 Feedimo. All Rights Reserved.