Gonsalves defends attending King’s coronation

King Charles (right) greeting Prime Minister Dr Ralph Gonsalves.

KINGSTOWN (CMC):

Prime Minister Dr. Ralph Gonsalves, a staunch anti-monarchist, has defended his decision to attend the coronation of Britain’s King Charles earlier this month, saying it would have been “churlish” of him to not attend the May 6 event.

He said that the new British monarch had provided assistance to St Vincent and the Grenadines during the April 2021 eruption of La Soufriere volcano.

The nation was represented by Governor General Dame Susan Dougan, her husband, Hugh Dougan, Prime Minister Gonsalves and his wife, Eloise Gonsalves.

Gonsalves said while he remains opposed to the British monarch being the sovereign of St Vincent and the Grenadines, he hopes that the constitutional provision that allows for it to exist is no longer in place in 2030.

In 2009, Vincentians rejected, in a referendum that among other things, proposed changes to the Constitution, which included replacing the British monarchy with a non-executive president as head of state.

Gonsalves, speaking on a radio programme here, was asked whether he thought that Vincentians would replace the British monarch by the end of the decade.

“Conceivably. And I think it’s a priority, but there are priorities and there are priorities; there are lists of priorities,” said Gonsalves, adding “I recognise King Charles as the King of St Vincent and Grenadines.

“That’s a fact of life, constitutionally. I had to recognise him, and that he has a representative here – Dame Susan,” said Gonsalves, noting “but I can’t accept in me that somebody who was not born here, who didn’t grow up here, who doesn’t live here, who is there only because something started in 1763 when Britain and France divided the Eastern Caribbean countries among themselves, and then from that moment onwards, every monarch there is head of state of St Vincent and the Grenadines.

“I just don’t know how anybody can simply say, ‘Well, that is something which is acceptable’ or that they could – that it adds to stability,” the prime minister said, adding that having the British monarch as sovereign of St Vincent and the Grenadines “is debilitating psychologically”.

Gonsalves attended the coronation on a day that his Minister of Agriculture, Saboto Caesar, who is seen as a potential successor to Gonsalves, described it as a “celebration without a conscience.

“I see the ‘coronation’ as a timely reminder that we must rise up and demand reparative justice,” Caesar wrote.

“We must not allow a selected few to own the process and turn it into a simplified discussion exercise. Neither must we sit with folded hands and suggest that only the handful of hard-working anti-colonialists should continue the fight without our help.”

Gonsalves said while he understood that some people have asked the question, “Well, Ralph, if that is your position, why did you go to the coronation?,” his response is “first of all, he (Charles) has to be recognised as king.

“Because that’s what the Constitution says. And the people of St Vincent and Grenadines validated the monarch, politically, in 2009.

“So, I recognise all that, I acknowledge all that but, in my body, in my bones, in my blood, I can’t accept it. But there’s nothing I can do about it. Because it is what it is … until that is changed.”

He noted that to change the constitutional provision requires a two-thirds majority both in Parliament followed by two-thirds majority in a referendum.

Gonsalves said this is “very difficult” to achieve.

Gonsalves said that at the coronation, “… those parts, which involved incantations about homage and loyalty and ‘God save the King’ and, and all the rest of it, I keep my mouth shut on those things.

“I involve myself in those things of Christian worship, including saying the Our Father Prayer when the Archbishop of Canterbury led that particular prayer during the service.”

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