Talk:Australians for Constitutional Monarchy
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Current N.S.W. Premier.
editThe current Premier of New South Wales is Morris Iemma. When did Bob Carr try to remove Marie Bashir from office as Governor of New South Wales? - (Aidan Work 23:37, 27 December 2005 (UTC))
- I believe the article is referring to the removal of the NSW governor from Government House as opposed to removal from office. The governor's official residence is no longer Government House.
Neutral?
editThis page reads very much as if it was written by a monarchist... (CGSwans2005)
- It is neutral enough for the topics covered, but the topics have avoided a few of the more controversial roles of the ACM. If the ACM's role in the republic referendum were to be covered, for instance, mention should be made of the claims that many of its members were involved in campaigns for a president elected by the people. I don't know enough about this to write anywhere other than a discussion page, but if you do knock yourself out. Conrad Leviston 12:30, 2 November 2006 (UTC)
ACM's position on the head of state
editI found this line interesting: "Australians for Constitutional Monarchy (ACM) was founded ... to preserve the role of the Queen of Australia, represented by the Governor-General, as Australia's constitutional head of state."
My understanding was that ACM's position was that the GG IS the head of state, and the Queen is simply the monarch. Confusing as this position is (is it possible to have a monarch distinct from a head of state?) it's an important counter argument to Republican demands for an Australian head of state. Mralph72 04:25, 5 November 2006 (UTC)
- I remember during the referendum campaign the ACM trying to pretend that the GG is the head of state. Anyone with any knowledge of the constitution knew otherwise (confirmed at the time by various experts), but in the public mind the message served to further muddy the waters, and contribute to the monarchists' FUD/confusion campaign. Personally I think that tactic was much to their discredit - it shows either a gross ignorance of the constitution from those posing as its defenders, or a duplicitous admission that public sentiment was against having a foreigner as head of state. Conollyb
- I have removed the sentences in question, which were POV, not properly cited and detracting from the article. I have also copyedited some of the paragraphs and fixed some disambiguations. This article also needs to differentiate between the groups' point of view versus other points of view, with proper citations of course. --Lholden 02:38, 5 September 2007 (UTC)
1.144.97.91 (talk) Opposition leader Mr Bill Shorten's mother-in-law, Governor -General Dame Quentin Bryce, was introduced to the Queen as 'Head of State of Australia'. The Head of State of New South Wales is David Hurley, the State Governor (according to his website). Every Australian State has a Head of State who is Australian. The Head of State of the Commonwealth of Australia is accordingly the Governor-General. The title 'Head of State' was devised to describe those who lead their country but who are not monarchs. —Preceding undated comment added 23:15, 29 July 2017 (UTC)
Neutrality
editThe article says ACM is often derided by opponents as "a well-funded 'old boys club' of establishment reactionaries".
I note the wikipedia article on the Australian Republican Movement does not say that the organisation is often derided by opponents as being elitist.
A lot of people say that about the ARM actually.
124.184.175.153 13:17, 4 September 2007 (UTC)
- Its true that the ARM is portrayed as a minority of elitist chardonnay sippers that wants to undermine the heritage of the 'real' Australians, whether they be the active ACM supporters or the so-called ordinary 'battlers'. Its a shame that we can't have a sensible national debate without recourse to stereotypes. The ACM passage is a record of the sad reality, though, rather than a breach of neutrality. Conollyb
The Eureka threat
editThe article should discuss the role ACM played in leading the attack against the great Eureka threat of 2004 where old Flint secured a large enough victory to see it off.
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editThis is an automated message regarding an image used on this page. The image File:ACM Logo.jpg, found on Australians for Constitutional Monarchy, has been nominated for deletion because it does not meet Wikipedia image policy. Please see the image description page for more details. If this message was sent in error (that is, the image is not up for deletion, or was left on the wrong talk page), please contact this bot's operator. STBotI (talk) 14:02, 28 December 2008 (UTC)
External links modified
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Asia-Pacific Agenda
editThe agenda behind the Republic issue is the dissolution of Australia into the Asia-Pacific after Australia's connection with Britain is broken. This will enable Australians to have the same currency, laws, wages and conditions as in other countries in Asia. The Australian Republican Movement regularly mentions independence from Britain but never mentions independence from Asia. Former PM Rudd, speaking to the Rockefeller's Asia Society (2009) stated that Europe was the best model [for such an integration]. Ten minutes later Europe was in crisis and has not yet recovered.
Australian trade unionists who support the Republic must be overjoyed at the opportunity to achieve Asia-Pacific wages and conditions whilst international financiers gain the opportunity to gain tribute from interregional trade between the EU and Asia-Pacific etc. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 1.144.97.91 (talk) 23:25, 29 July 2017 (UTC)