The republican objection is mainly that this monarchy is the wrong symbol of the “we”. That argument is sharpest coming from Indigenous Australians for whom the Crown isn’t merely foreign,but dispossessing. These are powerful objections,and in the Indigenous case,I think they’re elemental. But with the republic debate,critique is not enough. If you’re going to ask Australians to forgo the monarchy,you’re going to have to replace it with something more fitting,but still magical.
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As someone with republican sympathies,I’m forced to confess that so far,we haven’t. It’s fine to say we want an Australian president as our head of state,but a figure that changes regularly with no vaguely predictable line of succession doesn’t offer the sense of constancy,history or ritual we’d be replacing. If we’re going to do this,we’re going to have to draw on our own resources of history,tradition,ceremony,even spirituality. And hereabouts,I had an idea.
What if,instead of a monarch or a president,we had an Australian Elder? That is,a recognised Indigenous elder,appointed as our head of state for life. This figure already comes anchored in a long history,and a culture replete with ceremony. But one of the great things about some Indigenous ceremonies – like,say,welcomes to country – is that they are often endearingly informal.
This extraordinary mix of ceremony and informality,history and improvisation,captures something unique and charming about the Australian character – Indigenous and not. We could even call our Elder “Uncle” or “Aunty”. And when our Aunty dies,deep rituals of mourning would already exist,ready for us to embrace as a nation.
Obviously,this office is racially closed. But so is the monarchy,which is always going to be white,and doesn’t even extend to white Catholics. It is also undemocratic,which replicates precisely one of the monarchy’s virtues.
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Sure,I can see problems. How would the Elder be chosen from among the hundreds of First Nations? Does it rotate in a predetermined way? Our head of state has to be an apolitical figure,confining itself to speaking on areas of near total agreement. Would the Elder face too much pressure to become an activist? Would this all fall apart in 100 years when the Elder has to dismiss a government?
It’s rough,and not fully thought through,I admit. But it captures something of the richness and magic of monarchy,while being indisputably ours. And beneath everything that’s wrong with it,there might just be the material for a good idea better minds than mine can fashion. Feel free to be one of them.