In the summer of 2010 Queen Elizabeth II is scheduled to come to Canada . Her visit follows that earlier this year of her son Charles and his wife Camilla. I suspect that the Queen’s visit will garner some coverage in the press but not much attention among the general public. Unlike her glamorous late daughter-in-law Diana, Elizabeth II doesn’t pique the curiosity of the average person. Canadians appear to like but not revere the Queen, as exemplified in the attitude of an old Portuguese doctor who in the Toronto weekly Voice wrote that he considered Elizabeth II a genuinely good person yet laughed at the fact she wore hats similar to those his grandmother used to wear.
Though most Canadians don’t seem to have anything particularly against the Queen as an individual, she has increasingly found herself at the centre of a controversy over the institution she represents: the British monarchy. Some people believe Canada should throw off the final yoke of British colonialism, scrap the monarchy, and become a republic. Others by contrast feel equally strongly that Canada should remain part of the British Commonwealth – so strongly that they have formed groups such as the Monarchist League of Canada to ensure our country remains under the royal wing.
I myself am fairly agnostic on the issue.. My sense is that if we embraced republicanism tomorrow, life wouldn’t change much, either for better or for worse, in this country. However, while I’m hardly demanding that Canada go (small “r”) republican, nor would I necessarily fight to keep Queen Elizabeth on as our head of state if there were any serious movement to literally dethrone her. So I’d like to present the “pro” and “con” arguments, with their relevant counterpoints, for making Canada a completely independent nation or not.
Pro-Republican Arguments
#1 It is wrong that a person holds the position of head of a state simply for having been born into a particular family
From a purely rationalistic standpoint, it does seem both absurd and unjust that due to an accident of birth an individual can have their image placed on a nation’s currency, their initial in court cases (the “R” in “R. v. [name of defendant]” stands for “Regina,” meaning “Queen” in Latin) and their photograph in government buildings. This absurdity/injustice strikes us as even more untenable if we think that the royals are only human. A reader of a Montreal-based Italian-language publication put it even more succinctly: the royals obviously have no morality (this was just after the Camillagate tapes and pictures of the Duchess of York topless at the side of a pool came out), so why should they be more exalted than any of us common mortals?
Counterargument: This argument would be more convincing if the royals had any real power. But several generations now the British monarchs have been mere figureheads. If the Queen decided she was a pro-lifer, for instance, she would essentially be forced to go about trying to ban abortion the same way the head of the Society for the Protection of Unborn Children would: by first swaying the opinion of the general public and from there that of the elected officials. So the ability of the Queen or whoever succeeds her to influence our everyday lives is fairly limited.
#2 The British monarchy has no place in a multicultural society like Canada today
This argument was made by the above-mentioned Portuguese doctor in Voice. While he personally likes the Queen, he claims that having a member of a British family as Canada ’s head of state makes no sense in a nation where the Governor-General is a Black woman of Haitian descent and where some of our most prominent citizens boast names like Medeiros, Silva, Patel and Suzuki. Canada is a different country from that forty years ago when the majority of Canadians still hailed from White Anglo-Saxon Protestant stock. So it is time our form of government reflected that change.
Counterargument: Canada ’s demography has indeed changed in the past half-century. However, other than the special case of Quebec Canada is basically an Anglo-Saxon country culturally speaking. In the words of Lawrence E. Harrison in his book The Pan-American dream, “anglophone Canada is not really multicultural. Its bedrock is the same Anglo-Protestant system of values and attitudes that is the cultural foundation of the United States , and it is to this system that successful immigrants to Canada … acculturate.” This does not mean Canada should remain under the Queen –after all, the United States ditched the British monarchy over two centuries ago without losing its Anglo-Saxon character. But becoming a republic would not automatically make non-WASPs feel any more at home here.
Continue reading ‘Dreaming of the Queen – Republic vs Commonwealth’





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