From the CBC:
“Poll suggests most Canadians don't want Charles as King”
With the formal coronation of King Charles less than two
weeks away, a new survey suggests Canada's new monarch could have a tough road
ahead when it comes to winning over Canadians — and support for his wife,
Camilla, appears even weaker. Though the May 6 event is likely the first
coronation many Canadians will have a chance to watch themselves — the last one
was when Charles's mother, Elizabeth II was crowned 70 years ago in 1953 — the
number of Canadians who say they're looking forward to watching the event is
small.
A new poll from the Angus Reid Institute suggests most
respondents (60 per cent) oppose even recognizing Charles as King. Just 28 per
cent say they have a favourable view of Charles, while nearly half (48 per
cent) do not. And the news is equally bad when it comes to how they feel about
Charles's wife. Following the death last September of Queen Elizabeth, there
was much speculation and debate about what Camilla would be called with Charles
becoming King. At first, she was Queen Consort, a title the late Queen endorsed
before she died. But when the invitations to the May coronation were sent out
by Buckingham Palace, she was just Queen Camilla. "During the period of
mourning, there was potential for confusion if the [title] Queen was used to
refer to both the late Queen Elizabeth II and Queen Camilla,"
Toronto-based royal author and historian Carolyn Harris told CBC News earlier
this month. "With the coronation, there is only one King and Queen,
Charles III and Queen Camilla."
That clearly doesn't sit well with some Canadians. Two-thirds (66 per cent) of respondents to the
Angus Reid Institute survey said they're against even recognizing Camilla as
Queen of Canada. A majority (60 per cent) say she should not be referred to as
"Queen." Only 21 per cent think she should carry the title of Queen,
while 19 per cent said she should be referred to as Queen Consort. "Canadians are fairly unequivocal around
their views of whether the monarchy represents a modern institution, and indeed
an institution that they wish to see sit at the top of Canadian law, politics,
constitution for generations to come," Shachi Kurl, president of the Angus
Reid Institute, told CBC News. "And the answer to that is no."
Support for the monarchy down Support for the monarchy overall in
Canada has been on the decline, and lowest in Quebec. In this latest poll, more than half of
respondents (52 per cent) said they don't want Canada to continue as a
constitutional monarchy for generations to come, and of them, the vast majority
(88 per cent) said they'd be fine with opening the constitution to break the
ties. In Quebec, 66 per cent of respondents are against Canada remaining a
constitutional monarchy. Overall, 45 per cent of respondents said they'd
support opening the constitution to sever ties to the monarchy, while only
one-third (33 per cent) think Canada should remain a constitutional monarchy
for generations to come. Perhaps
not surprisingly, then, tuning in to the coronation isn't necessarily at the
top of Canadian to-do lists. While a majority of those who responded to the
survey (59 per cent) said they'll pay some attention to the May 6 coronation,
only nine per cent said they're really looking forward to it. One in five (20
per cent) said they might tune in for some of it, while 29 per cent said they
may read about it, but really aren't that interested. Kurl said these numbers would have those
at Buckingham Palace feeling uneasy. "It's not as though Canadians
are in the streets preparing to protest against the monarchy, but the amount of
ambivalence and the 'meh' factor in Canada — which represents a very
significant country within the British realm — it would be fairly
concerning." It comes down
to relevance, Kurl said. "There's less and less connection to the
monarchy among Canadians than there was 70 years ago, when the Queen herself
ascended to the throne and became monarch. At that time Canada was a country
with extremely close, both cultural and familial ties to the United Kingdom ...
Today, Canada's demographics are vastly different."
Greater affection for Queen Elizabeth While Canadians may never have felt
great affection for Charles, they did embrace his mother, right up until the
end of her life. Angus Reid Institute
surveys from around the time of her 96th birthday one year ago found 63 per
cent of respondents said they had a positive view of her, and 59 per cent said
they would be saddened by her death. But
none of her potential heirs — including Charles's son, Prince William — are as
popular. Only three in 10 told the Angus Reid Institute they view
Charles positively (28 per cent), and more than half (52 per cent) believe he
will do a worse job than his mother as monarch. About one in five (21 per cent)
think he'll do about as well as his mother, while only three per cent think
he'll do a better job. Robert Finch, chairman of the Monarchist League
of Canada, told CBC News it's not surprising the transition is facing some
challenges, given that the monarchy and Queen Elizabeth became essentially
inseparable from one another during her long reign. He believes that
over time Canadians will come around to supporting Charles like they did his
mother as they learn more about him. He cited some of the initiatives
Charles undertook as prince. "Things such as reconciliation with
Indigenous people, working with young Canadians and their entrepreneurship, the
whole environmental movement — I mean, Charles was an environmentalist long
before the green movement became mainstream," Finch said. "Those
are Canadian values that people would look at and say, yeah I can relate to
that."
According to the poll, Prince William and his wife Catherine
are seen more positively than Charles, but still fall short of the support
Elizabeth garnered. Among Canadian respondents overall, 53 per cent have a
positive view of William while that number is 56 for Catherine. However, among
those who said they don't support Canada continuing as a constitutional
monarchy, support for the couple dropped to 36 and 41 per cent respectively. Of note, though, is that among those who said
they support Canada remaining a constitutional monarchy, far more have a
favourable impression of William and Catherine (83 per cent support for each)
than for Charles (62 per cent) or Camilla (43 per cent). The Angus Reid
Institute surveyed a representative randomized sample of 2,013 Canadian adults
who are members of Angus Reid Forum online from April 10-12, 2023. A
probability sample of this size has a margin of error of +/- 2 percentage
points, 19 times out of 20.
^ As a Canadian I have long said that Canada should hold a
Nation-Wide Referendum on whether to remain a Monarchy or become a Republic. I
do think that regardless of the outcome of such a Referendum that Canada should
remain in the Commonwealth of Nations – just not as a Commonwealth Realm if the
majority of Canadians vote against a Monarchy. ^
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/king-charles-coronation-canadian-weak-support-interest-1.6816980
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