Shooting Star
Well-known member
40% of the land in UK is still owned by the descendants of Norman overlords.
Have you read Guy Shrubsole’s “Who Owns England” by any chance?
40% of the land in UK is still owned by the descendants of Norman overlords.
I am probably the opposite of some posters on here it seems: I used to be a republican, now I’m just about pro-monarchy.
I remember having a heated argument on FB (where all great debates are held, of course, second only to NSC) with my pro-monarchy friends on the day of the Royal wedding in 2011. A year later I was in London protesting the jubilee with the group Republic. In truth, it was quite an embarrassing protest: there were roughly a couple of hundred of us, in contrast to the tens of thousands of people who travelled to London that day to celebrate the jubilee. If the million who marched against Brexit couldn’t change that, there’s not much hope for republicanism being able to make much headway, irrespective of the voters on polls such as these.
Ten years on and my republicanism has waned and I’d vote to keep the monarchy if there was a referendum today. I still empathise with many of the arguments of republicans and if you created a country today, it’s almost nailed on that you wouldn’t establish a monarchy. However, there’s too many other issues that loom larger in the public imagination at the moment that just seem more important than changing our system of government, and as this thread goes to prove, electoral reform and reform of the House of Lords would come higher up the list than looking at who should be Head of State. Additionally, the argument for a monarchy that has swayed me in recent years is the realisation that a Queen/King usually spends his/her whole life preparing for the role from childhood, and then the rest of their life perfecting and performing it until they die (or abdicate). That just couldn’t be said if it was an elected position (unless you had some REALLY pushy parents). The Queen is a model of this in my opinion.
Charles’ reign could sway me back to republicanism, but I reckon I’ll spend all of it waiting eagerly for William to become king.
I agree. Is there a compelling case for change at this time given numerous more important issues? I wonder if they’re having the same monarchy v republic debate in Russia. There are far worse places to live in the world.I am probably the opposite of some posters on here it seems: I used to be a republican, now I’m just about pro-monarchy.
I remember having a heated argument on FB (where all great debates are held, of course, second only to NSC) with my pro-monarchy friends on the day of the Royal wedding in 2011. A year later I was in London protesting the jubilee with the group Republic. In truth, it was quite an embarrassing protest: there were roughly a couple of hundred of us, in contrast to the tens of thousands of people who travelled to London that day to celebrate the jubilee. If the million who marched against Brexit couldn’t change that, there’s not much hope for republicanism being able to make much headway, irrespective of the voters on polls such as these.
Ten years on and my republicanism has waned and I’d vote to keep the monarchy if there was a referendum today. I still empathise with many of the arguments of republicans and if you created a country today, it’s almost nailed on that you wouldn’t establish a monarchy. However, there’s too many other issues that loom larger in the public imagination at the moment that just seem more important than changing our system of government, and as this thread goes to prove, electoral reform and reform of the House of Lords would come higher up the list than looking at who should be Head of State. Additionally, the argument for a monarchy that has swayed me in recent years is the realisation that a Queen/King usually spends his/her whole life preparing for the role from childhood, and then the rest of their life perfecting and performing it until they die (or abdicate). That just couldn’t be said if it was an elected position (unless you had some REALLY pushy parents). The Queen is a model of this in my opinion.
Charles’ reign could sway me back to republicanism, but I reckon I’ll spend all of it waiting eagerly for William to become king.
The absolute contempt of the average British voter on this thread is astounding.
Some of the electorate has very rarely voted the way I personally would like, but I don’t really blame the voters. It’s the system that is at fault, as I said in my last post, 56% of voters voted against the Conservative and Unionist party in the last election. All the time we have FPTP as our electoral system, we could get Governments with huge , unearned majorities.
The posters criticising the average voter, who do they think these people are,some sort of sub human species who can’t manage to tie their own shoelaces? Our gutter press has to harbour a lot of the blame for the current state of affairs,as should our education system that has taught people not to question the accepted point of view. If the British public is guilty of anything, it’s naivety,and the willingness to accept without question the establishment narrative.
I'm instinctively opposed to Monarchy, and get thoroughly peed-off with the facile "we need them for tourism" argument - as if no-one ever visits Paris or New York!
But, another elected leader: Tony Blair? Nigel Farage? Ricky Gervais? Miranda Hart? Yuk.
In spite of my instinctive Republicanism, I'd go for a compromise; keep the Monarchy, but slim it right down by getting rid of all the junior c-list Royals, flunkeys, and the Royal Estates (Balmoral, Sandringham, etc).
I was waiting for your killer argument for keeping the monarchy but that just kind of fizzled out. It seemed to boil down to "these people are bred to rule over us"
Get rid of all the royals and we could have someone like Johnson as our head of state. Changing the rules and ethics to suit himself.
I was waiting for your killer argument for keeping the monarchy but that just kind of fizzled out. It seemed to boil down to "these people are bred to rule over us"[/QUOTE]
Maybe this is why the Tories keep winning elections?
There's still a lot of deference in our country and sadly people are vulnerable to manipulation.
Our system needs reform from FPTP to HOL to the role of the monarch...
The government was elected by a majority. Not by a class system. Blame the idiots who voted for them. I agree the class system is totally wrong but getting rid of the monarchy will not get rid of elitist schools etc.
Very good point (even though the contra point is also defensible).
Personally, thinking about it, I would rather have Johnson as head of state than as PM. Makes me thing of Zaphod Beeblebrox, and his election as president of the universe.
NO.
I see very few "Presidents" that i think i could follow with any more affection that i do for the Queen or do a better job.
The cost of the sovereign grant isnt much more than the cost of an elected head of state.
As others have said we would end up with a Trump or a Johnson on a bigger Ego trip.
What does it solve.
We know with some amount of certainty that the next 3 heads of state (possibly 70-100 years plus) will be :
Male
Christian
White
Heterosexual
Privately educated
We have no say in that whatsoever.
If you feel that is is a good representation of democratic multicultural Britain then good for you. But I don’t abd think a ceremonial position can be replaced with sonething much better suited to modern day Britain. The idea of hereditary hos is very old fashioned and odd.
Give me Johnson or trump as long as they are fairly voted in they can be fairly booted out. Not much we could do if Charles becomes a maniac!
But people who have come here or bred here know our heritage, so it's their choice to live with it, just like it's our choice to live with a tory or labour government.
I dont get the constant whinging and complaining.
It appears you have an issue with the list above?
For example what is wrong with a white male Christian who likes women and has been fortunate enough to get private education?
The right answer.
I’d like an elected president to lead an elected House of Lords (we would need to change that stupid name).
The President would get a 5 year term and would need to be independent of political parties (but not politics in general). They would need to be nominated rather than throwing their hat in. I’m thinking of people such as Sir David Attenborough taking the role, the best of us rather than the worst of us (Boris Johnson for example).
The President would lead the new elected house of peers in examining laws passed in parliament and then do all that ceremonial stuff.