In conversation with Craig Foster

Australia became a republic many years ago—culturally, if not yet constitutionally. We’ve long stopped identifying as subjects of the British Crown, relying on UK military and trade relationships, and looking to London as our lodestar. We’ve long stopped allowing the UK Parliament to override our laws, accepting imported vice-regal representatives, and even hearing from our governor-general on days of national significance. We’ve long stopped singing ‘God Save the Queen’, and when the King visited last year, hardly anyone noticed. Some of these have been natural evolutions, some politically imposed; all make the monarchy less and less visible in everyday Australia. For a multicultural federation on the sovereign lands of hundreds of First Nations, all of this makes good sense—but, like it or not, we remain a British realm. Our governments and indeed our democracy exist only at His Majesty’s pleasure, codified in a faulty constitution, and systematically incapacitating necessary reform.

6:30-8:00pm Thursday 9 October 2025
at Better Read Than Dead
265 King St Newtown

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