On the fourth Queen's birthday holiday this year, it’s time we replaced this outdated occasion with a day that celebrates Australian achievement.
Queen Elizabeth II turned 92 on Saturday, 21 April 2018. I’ve asked before, when will she be allowed to put up her feet?
Most 92 year olds are long retired, but not that trouper the Queen. My grandmother will be 93 later this year. She's a hardy soul but there's no way she would be up to the frantic pace needed to be a world leader. Even though retirement plans for many people keep going further and further beyond 60, Queen Elizabeth II has still well and truly exceeded this.
Most 92 year olds are long retired, but not that trouper the Queen. My grandmother will be 93 later this year. She's a hardy soul but there's no way she would be up to the frantic pace needed to be a world leader. Even though retirement plans for many people keep going further and further beyond 60, Queen Elizabeth II has still well and truly exceeded this.
I’ve written before that it has always seemed absurd that
Australians acknowledge the birthday of Queen Elizabeth II at a completely
different time to her actual birthday. Around Australia, the Queen's Birthday public
holiday is held on the second Monday in June —
except in WA and Queensland. WA had their Queen’s Birthday holiday on Monday,
24 September 2018, and in Queensland on Monday, 1 October 2018.
Earlier this year, I wrote on how Queensland had become a little less
"Queenie" with the move of the Queen’s Birthday holiday from the
second Monday in June to the first Monday in October in 2016, as no one seems to have noticed the move.
But what actually happens on this
day?
Nothing.
While the date of the Queen’s Birthday public holiday has
changed repeatedly in Queensland in recent years, a bolder reform would have
been to change the holiday completely.
“Australia
should replace royal birthdays with a public holiday of our own … a new
‘Citizens Day’ holiday in September to strengthen Australian citizenship. This
could build on existing activities for the anniversary of the Australian
Citizenship Act in September 1948. What
better way is there to celebrate the best in our country than with a new
Citizens Day public holiday? A new day, dedicated to democracy, freedom and the
law would be a modern, unifying Australian institution.”
The difference between citizen
and subject has often been glibly said to be that a citizen has rights
whereas a subject has privileges. A subject owes their allegiance to a
sovereign and is governed by that sovereign’s laws whereas a citizen
owes allegiance to the community and is entitled to enjoy all its civil rights
and protections. The difference between citizen and subject lies
in where an individual places their allegiance: subjects (to a sovereign) and
citizens (to a state; to a republic).
On 26 January 1949, the legal concept of Australian citizenship was created with the enactment of the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948. Before then, at common law, to be a British subject, one simply had to be
born in any territory under the sovereignty of the British Crown. From 1949
onwards, every person who was a British subject by virtue of a connection with
the United Kingdom or one of her Crown colonies became a British citizen.
However, citizens of other Commonwealth countries retained the status of
British subject and were known by the term Commonwealth citizen.
From 1949 to 1982, a person born in
England would have been a British subject and a citizen of the United Kingdom
and Colonies, while someone born in Australia would have been a British subject
and a citizen of Australia. During this time Australian passports had on the
front ‘BRITISH SUBJECT Australian Citizen’.
The status of British subject was retained in Australian law until Part II of the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 was removed by the Australian Citizenship Amendment Act 1984 which came into force on 1 May 1987. Australia severed its final legal ties to Britain by enacting the Australia Acts of 1986. However, it must be said, we have yet to sever our final symbolic ties to Britain as represented by our head of state being the British monarch.
The status of British subject was retained in Australian law until Part II of the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 was removed by the Australian Citizenship Amendment Act 1984 which came into force on 1 May 1987. Australia severed its final legal ties to Britain by enacting the Australia Acts of 1986. However, it must be said, we have yet to sever our final symbolic ties to Britain as represented by our head of state being the British monarch.
Bolstering of Australia’s citizenship
program in the 1990’s occurred first with the Australian Citizenship Amendment Act 1993, which incorporated a preamble into
the Nationality and Citizenship Act 1948 to recognize
that citizenship is a common bond of rights and responsibilities for all
Australians, and replaced the oath of allegiance with a Pledge of
Commitment, and the Australian Citizenship Act 2007.
The final stage in the process of becoming an
Australian citizen is making the Australian Citizenship Pledge. It usually
happens at a ceremony when new Australian citizens make a public pledge of
their commitment to Australia. All new citizens have the choice of making the pledge with or without the words 'under
God'.
From this time forward, under God
I pledge my loyalty to Australia and its people,
Whose democratic beliefs I share,
whose rights and liberties I respect, and
whose laws I uphold and obey.
I pledge my loyalty to Australia and its people,
Whose democratic beliefs I share,
whose rights and liberties I respect, and
whose laws I uphold and obey.
You’d think one birthday would be
enough for the Queen. Australians who are out there making a difference in
their communities every day don’t even get one day in their honour — let alone
four!
Surely, this must be the most
irrelevant and outdated of public holidays. The Queen’s Birthday holidays don’t
remind us of anything good about our country. At worst, they tell us
Australia’s head of state gets the job by inheritance and that Australians are subject
to a foreign crown – the opposite of democracy and liberty.
Monarchist's can prattle on endlessly
about how retaining the monarchy brings stabilty and is cheaper than having a
home grown head of state and the like. But when you boil it all down, you can't
escape the fact there's something a little unnatural about a grown child of,
shall we say, 230 years, still electing to live in mummy's back bedroom.
Deciding to pack our bags and finally
leave our Buckingham Palace nursery room isn't being rude to the Queen. It's
just the natural order of things, and she's reportedly acknowledged as much to
past prime ministers. How many more Ashes tours must we endure with the Barmy
Army taunting us with their song God Save Your Queen? Time to cut the apron
strings, assert our independence, and let one of our own people serve as head
of state.
Citizenship is for all Australians.
It is a commitment of loyalty to
Australia and its people and their shared democratic beliefs, laws and rights.
It is a bond uniting our culturally
diverse society.
Australia today, is one of the world’s
great nations, with a bright future that must be 100 per cent in the hands of
the Australian people. We are ready to move on from our colonial past and
become a fully independent nation with fully Australian national institutions,
including our own Head of State.
It’s time we established a Citizens Day
public holiday.
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