Zürcher Nachrichten - Spectre of royal meddling haunts Charles in Australia

EUR -
AED 3.994155
AFN 71.230643
ALL 98.851221
AMD 421.105563
ANG 1.959969
AOA 992.279154
ARS 1065.594393
AUD 1.620861
AWG 1.957364
AZN 1.852939
BAM 1.961273
BBD 2.195827
BDT 129.962662
BGN 1.956843
BHD 0.409928
BIF 3145.375267
BMD 1.087424
BND 1.427283
BOB 7.514971
BRL 6.190495
BSD 1.087535
BTN 91.425122
BWP 14.500464
BYN 3.559032
BYR 21313.519528
BZD 2.192117
CAD 1.502006
CDF 3094.810423
CHF 0.940446
CLF 0.037575
CLP 1036.816161
CNY 7.722676
CNH 7.740249
COP 4640.583907
CRC 558.959781
CUC 1.087424
CUP 28.816748
CVE 110.781411
CZK 25.239453
DJF 193.257504
DKK 7.463434
DOP 65.735236
DZD 145.212532
EGP 52.837041
ERN 16.311367
ETB 128.864011
FJD 2.423547
FKP 0.832063
GBP 0.833068
GEL 2.958219
GGP 0.832063
GHS 17.480392
GIP 0.832063
GMD 76.120099
GNF 9384.473525
GTQ 8.408464
GYD 227.522812
HKD 8.450006
HNL 27.298528
HRK 7.4913
HTG 143.119376
HUF 400.357487
IDR 16827.186781
ILS 4.047014
IMP 0.832063
INR 91.419177
IQD 1424.52605
IRR 45769.696145
ISK 149.401667
JEP 0.832063
JMD 172.762094
JOD 0.770771
JPY 162.572681
KES 140.278138
KGS 92.978923
KHR 4417.118561
KMF 492.766814
KPW 978.681774
KRW 1489.782809
KWD 0.333318
KYD 0.906329
KZT 525.376066
LAK 23855.378326
LBP 97433.232507
LKR 318.428577
LRD 209.084582
LSL 19.14277
LTL 3.210882
LVL 0.657773
LYD 5.235991
MAD 10.803605
MDL 19.374063
MGA 4996.715797
MKD 61.512242
MMK 3531.912247
MNT 3695.068365
MOP 8.703186
MRU 43.247283
MUR 50.500404
MVR 16.692377
MWK 1887.769248
MXN 21.612616
MYR 4.680823
MZN 69.490479
NAD 19.236949
NGN 1777.939375
NIO 39.995881
NOK 11.875915
NPR 146.280196
NZD 1.790854
OMR 0.418634
PAB 1.087535
PEN 4.097963
PGK 4.290438
PHP 62.549063
PKR 301.92381
PLN 4.307631
PYG 8610.02634
QAR 3.958773
RON 4.978995
RSD 116.991736
RUB 103.490736
RWF 1469.110453
SAR 4.084447
SBD 9.0625
SCR 15.327648
SDG 654.089813
SEK 11.441272
SGD 1.424639
SHP 0.832063
SLE 25.000292
SLL 22802.743856
SOS 620.919738
SRD 35.763257
STD 22507.490939
SVC 9.515553
SYP 2732.186884
SZL 19.142641
THB 36.04925
TJS 11.598459
TMT 3.81686
TND 3.364822
TOP 2.546861
TRY 37.250535
TTD 7.379593
TWD 34.859607
TZS 2957.794911
UAH 44.839926
UGX 3989.1317
USD 1.087424
UYU 45.567155
UZS 13951.656258
VEF 3939252.254264
VES 42.541279
VND 27365.03668
VUV 129.10125
WST 3.046076
XAF 657.792575
XAG 0.032237
XAU 0.0004
XCD 2.938819
XDR 0.812668
XOF 656.264575
XPF 119.331742
YER 272.23711
ZAR 19.126437
ZMK 9788.129001
ZMW 28.90165
ZWL 350.150234
  • RBGPF

    0.4200

    60.92

    +0.69%

  • JRI

    0.0700

    13.22

    +0.53%

  • NGG

    0.8100

    68

    +1.19%

  • BCC

    -0.4600

    141.74

    -0.32%

  • BCE

    0.0500

    33.54

    +0.15%

  • SCS

    -0.2000

    13.01

    -1.54%

  • CMSD

    0.0200

    25.04

    +0.08%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    24.78

    -0.04%

  • RELX

    -0.4200

    48.17

    -0.87%

  • RIO

    0.2700

    65.36

    +0.41%

  • VOD

    0.0300

    9.76

    +0.31%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    7.45

    +1.34%

  • GSK

    -0.4100

    38.55

    -1.06%

  • BP

    0.0100

    31.33

    +0.03%

  • AZN

    0.2400

    78.26

    +0.31%

  • BTI

    -0.8700

    34.5

    -2.52%

Spectre of royal meddling haunts Charles in Australia
Spectre of royal meddling haunts Charles in Australia / Photo: DAVID GRAY - AFP

Spectre of royal meddling haunts Charles in Australia

The cloud from a decades-old political crisis hangs over King Charles III's tour of Australia, where the 1975 sacking of a sitting prime minister continues to fuel suspicions of royal meddling.

Text size:

Governor-General John Kerr used his vice-regal powers in 1975 to topple Labor Prime Minister Gough Whitlam, a popular leader beset by a string of parliamentary scandals.

It remains the only time the governor-general -- the throne's envoy in overseas realms -- has made such a drastic intervention in Australian democracy.

Almost 50 years later, intrigue still swirls around the monarchy's role in "The Dismissal".

Recently unearthed correspondence exposed then-Prince Charles's stance on the interference -- a source of further controversy in a decades-long simmering debate on the relevance of the monarchy.

"It was an unprecedented action by Queen Elizabeth's representative in Australia," historian Jenny Hocking told AFP.

"It's a stunning, volcanic moment in our history. And the potential role of the monarch has always been a question."

Hocking fought a years-long legal battle to publish a trove of secret letters between Kerr and Buckingham Palace.

Finally unsealed in 2020 after a High Court ruling, the so-called "Palace Letters" showed Kerr dutifully keeping the queen's aides abreast of the unfolding political turmoil.

The letters suggest Queen Elizabeth II had no hidden role in sacking the prime minister.

- 'Extraordinary interference' -

But one recently surfaced exchange shows then-Prince Charles was at least supportive of Kerr's decision in hindsight.

"Please don't lose heart," Charles wrote to Kerr in the aftermath.

"What you did last year was right and the courageous thing to do."

Hocking said this amounted to "an extraordinary interference in Australian politics".

"Charles is basically praising him for dismissing an elected government, saying he'd made a courageous decision.

"And we should keep that in mind as we entertain the current king, who has been described before as a meddling prince."

News of the government's removal sent Australian stock markets into meltdown, sparking mass rallies and fears of civil violence.

For many Australians, it shattered their sense of independence and fuelled fears of colonial masters pulling the strings.

It remains seared into the psyche of the nation, where it is still taught in schools, and debated over the airwaves and over drinks at the pub.

- 'Eruptive' moment -

"It's because it was such an eruptive moment in our history," said Hocking.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese -- an avowed republican -- has said the imbroglio showed "the need for us to have an Australian head of state".

Swept to power in 1972 -- the first Labor government in more than 20 years -- Whitlam lost control of parliament as a string of forced resignations whittled away his majority.

Unable to secure enough votes to pass the government budget, governor-general Kerr sacked Whitlam and installed conservative opposition leader Malcolm Fraser in his place.

It remains "the most dramatic and controversial event in Australia's constitutional and political history", according to government historians.

Ironically, Whitlam and Fraser would bury the hatchet in the late 1990s to campaign together in favour of an Australian republic.

That 1999 referendum failed as 54 percent of Australians backed the status quo.

A recent poll showed about a third of Australians would like to ditch the monarchy, a third would keep it and a third are ambivalent.

N.Fischer--NZN