CANBERRA ā Lawmakers in an Australian state pledged their allegiance to King Charles III on Tuesday with some using the occasion to call for an Australian republic.
Australiaās center-left Labor Party government wants an Australian president to replace the British monarch as the nationās head of state. The death of Queen Elizabeth II last week after a 70-year reign is seen by many as an ideal opportunity for change.
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Lawmakers from the minor Greens party used their swearing in ceremony in the Victoria Parliament to advocate for an Australian head of state.
āWeāre here as Victorian MPs to swear allegiance to King Charles III, a new head of state decided for us, but not by us,ā Greens leader Samantha Ratnam told reporters before the ceremony, referring to members of Parliament.
āThis is a really important time to reflect on the role of the British monarchy going forward in Australia, the impact of colonization and the need to move forward in this country with a treaty and with a republic,ā Ratnam added.
Despite the protest, all four Greens lawmakers fell in with the rest in swearing or affirming their allegiance to the king, whose is head of state of Britain, Australia and another 13 countries that were once part of the British Empire.
Three Greens lawmakers wore clothes with slogans that highlighted that the British colonized Australia without signing a treaty with its Indigenous people.
The ceremony in Australiaās second-most populous state, which is named after the 19th century monarch Queen Victoria, was the result of a legal quirk that underscores how complicated the process of Australia severing its constitutional ties with Britainās monarch could become.
Lawmakersā pledge of allegiance in the other five states and in the Australian Parliament roll over from the late queen to her eldest son.
Victoria demands a new oath to a dead monarchās successor before lawmakers can vote on motions or legislation ā a procedure one expert called a āsilly quirk.ā
āTheyāve got a clause in their constitution that shouldnāt be there,ā George Williams, a University of New South Wales constitutional lawyer, said.
āReally, you donāt need it. You should have the oath ... to the monarchās heirs and successorsā as occurs in the Australian Parliament, Williams said.
Australians voted at a 1999 referendum against Australia becoming a republic and breaking its constitutional ties to its former colonial master.
If that referendum had succeeded in establishing an Australian president, the states were expected to eventually take the same step, Williams said.
Williams did not consider an Australian republic with state monarchies would be sustainable in the long term.
āIt would be symbolically fraught and pretty inconvenient and wouldnāt make much sense either to be a republican nation and have state monarchies,ā Williams said.
āI donāt think anyone would think it would last very long, but itās at least a theoretical possibility,ā Williams added.
Adelaide University Law Professor Greg Taylor said the potential for states to resist ending their links to monarch was no reason for Australia not to hold a second referendum on becoming a republic.
āThere are very good reasons for not doing it, but āitās too hardā is not one of them,ā Taylor said.
He said the German Empire from 1871 until 1918 was an example of a coalition of monarchies and republics.
āSo such a thing is possible. I think personally it would be rather odd,ā Taylor, said referring to the possibility of state monarchies remaining in an Australian republic.
The British monarch is represented across the Australian nation by a governor-general who is appointed by the monarch on the advice of the prime minister.
The monarch is represented in each state by a state governor appointed on the advice of the state premier.
The Australian Capital Territory and Northern Territory donāt have the same rights as states and their links to the monarch are less direct.