Judging by recent developments, republicanism as a cultural and political force is dead. John Lydon, the former Sex Pistols front man who sang “God Save the Queen! Her fascist regime!” has announced he wants to make a documentary. Against the monarchy? No. In praise of the “good” that the Royal family does.
Will republicanism soon be a word describing a piece of history, rather than an active, living political force?
But republicans are not easily put off. A united states of republican Europe is being promoted as a vision of the future. A host of organisations keen to replace constitutional monarchies in Europe with republics are banding together to advance a pan-European, pro-republic organisation. It’s all happening this summer.
In June Graham Smith, head of the UK’s republican organisation, which is called Republic, is flying to Stockholm. He is hoping to set up an alliance that aims to crush royal powers all over Europe.
Why now?
“Our culture is changing. People are becoming less deferential and more questioning of constitutions and coalescing around Europeanism,” says Smith.
Why not include non-European monarchies too?
“Non-European monarchies have different concerns. They’re usually more dictatorial than European constitutional monarchies in Western democracies which have similar things in common,” he adds. But they all have kings and queens.
Regional republican movements have been tried before. Common Cause, the republican group for the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada Commonwealth countries, was started in 2005 to create “a network of cross-party republican movements in all the countries and territories in the Commonwealth that continue to have the British monarch as their head of state”.
Sounds promising until you notice that on their website, most information about republican activities in the Commonwealth countries with monarchies (ie Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados, Belize, Canada, Cook Islands, Grenada, Jamaica, Nuie, Papua New Guinea, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Solomon Islands, The Bahamas, Tokelau and Tuvalu) is not yet available.
Time to find a different way around?
Tessa Mayes
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