A ‘petty’ and ‘mean’ band of woke Australians are determined to wreck King Charles’ historic visit this week – but the British monarch will be warmly welcomed by the average Aussie who wants him to be head of state, experts told MailOnline today.
Charles, 75, who has visited Australia 16 times, has put his cancer treatment on hold to ensure the six-day trip can go ahead – yet the Australian Republic Movement (ARM) have vowed to make the visit the ‘Monarchy Farewell Oz Tour’.
And six of Australia’s state premiers, five of them from the left-wing Australian Labor Party, are too busy with other commitments to welcome him at a special reception – even though the tour was organised months ago.
These include NSW premier Chris Minns, who defended the decision not to light up Sydney Opera House’s sails for the Coronation and Victorian premier Jacinta Allan, whose administration encouraged biological males who identify as females to participate in an inquiry into women’s pain earlier this year.
South Australian premier Peter Malinauskas will also be absent. He was branded ‘un-Australian’ after his government removed the names of national holidays such as Anzac Day, calling it ‘April 25’ instead. It was branded an ‘insult’ to war veterans.
Royal commentator Phil Dampier has called the politicians ‘rude and disrespectful’ while royal biographer Tom Bower told MailOnline today: ‘The republicans do their cause no good by seeking to embarrass a sick man who is doing his duty by travelling across the world at the request of the Australian government.
‘They expose themselves as petty and, worse, inhumane in not acknowledging the King’s personal sacrifice to do his duty’.
A host of Australia’s top politicians, all of them left-wing, have refused to meet Charles in Australia’s capital next week, where British campaign group Republic is even planning a protest with CEO Graham Smith flying in from the UK.
Other protests are also planned in Sydney for when Charles and Camilla are in the city.
King Charles III and Queen Camilla pose for their official Australian visit portrait. Charles, 75, was diagnosed with an undisclosed form of cancer earlier this year following prostate surgery – but has asked to pause treatment so he can head Down Under this week
King Charles and Queen Camilla pictured walking on Broadbeach on the Gold Coast, Australia, in 2018
Prince Charles enjoys swimming in the sea at Bondi Beach during his tour of Australia in 1981
Neither Victorian Premier Jacinta Allan (pictured left) or her deputy Ben Carroll (right) will attend the Canberra welcome for the King
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese (left) and Queensland premier Steven Miles (right) today. Miles has said he will be busy campaigning for re-election when the King visits
NSW premier Chris Minns (left) said he cannot attend the Canberra welcoming also because of a cabinet meeting. South Australia premier Peter Malinauskas (right) also has a regional cabinet meeting
Tasmanian premier Jeremy Rockliff (left) is on a US trade mission. West Australian premier Roger Cook (right) would only say he has ‘other commitments’
But Victoria’s Labor premier Jacinta Allan and her deputy premier Ben Carroll won’t be attending the King’s welcome event in Canberra on Monday.
Ms Allan, whose government has been slammed for encouraging biological males who identify as females to participate in an inquiry into women’s pain, will send parliamentary secretary Nick Staikos and state governor Margaret Gardner, an avowed republican.
NSW Labor premier Chris Minns said he cannot attend the Canberra welcoming also because of a cabinet meeting but he reportedly will attend other events with the King.
But he will see them in Sydney.
Queensland Labor premier Steven Miles said he will be busy campaigning for re-election campaign and Tasmanian premier Jeremy Rockliff, a left-leaning Liberal, is on a US trade mission.
South Australian Labor premier Peter Malinauskas also has a regional cabinet meeting while a spokesman for Western Australia‘s Labor Premier, Roger Cook would only say he has ‘other commitments’.
Royal commentator Phil Dampier told MailOnline today it is ‘rude and disrespectful’ of them to turn down the King.
‘Ironically all the polls are still showing a majority of Australians would vote to keep Charles as head of state if there was a referendum tomorrow’, he said.
‘The Prime Minister Anthony Albanese is a republican, but he has wisely put the issue on the back burner as he knows he could easily lose.
‘Bearing in mind his age and the fact he is battling cancer, it seems churlish of these Governors not to accept an invitation to meet the King and Queen’.
Charles and Camilla are due to arrive in Australia on Friday.
They will be heading to Sydney and Canberra, where protests are planned in a nation recently branded the most ‘woke country in the world’.
It also comes as a new poll in Australia showed support for the monarchy remains high as the King set to embark on an historic tour of the country on Friday.
A Daily Telegraph in Sydney poll found one in four have a more favourable view of King Charles than they did before he was crowned. And just one in three thought Australia should become a republic –down on the 39.4 per cent who voted that way at the country’s referendum in 1999.
Tom Bower told MailOnline today that Charles’ visit will be a great success, and the majority of Australians are behind him, as shown by the weekend’s poll.
He said: ‘Charles knows that the Australian republicans’ traditional loud campaign to end the monarchy has always been defeated by the Australian electors.
‘The King knows that the Queen and the Royal Family have always been warmly supported in Australia and have politely acknowledged the minority republicans’ weakness is that the alternative is considered to be worse.
‘The King will be received with genuine support not least because he has dug deep roots since his boyhood’.
Phil Dampier has slammed those trying to hijack the trip for their own political ends.
He said: ‘The King and his late mother have always made it clear that it’s up to Australians to decide their form of Government and whether to ditch the monarchy, something they would accept gracefully if it happened.
‘So for these State Governors to snub him is rude and disrespectful.
‘He has shown them respect but they are not showing it back, presumably for their own political gain.
‘I’m sure Charles and Camilla will receive a warm welcome, although there will be a tiny number of anti-monarchy protestors shouting in the background.
The statue of Captain Cook in St Kilda cut down in January by anti-Australia Day protesters
A Queen Victoria monument in Melbourne was also vandalised with red paint
Video footage circulating on social media showed the vandals cutting the head from the statue of George V in Melbourne in June
The late Queen is being removed from Australia’s $5 banknote, but won’t be replaced with a portrait of King Charles III
‘The reception won’t be on the scale of when Prince Charles and his new wife Diana first toured there in the 1980s of course, and he and Camilla are a couple in their seventies.
‘But they represent a system which many people believe works for them, and let’s not forget how many Aussies still have ties to the old country.
‘Bearing in mind his age and the fact he is battling cancer, it seems churlish of these Governors not to accept an invitation to meet the King and Queen.
‘At the very least they could express their views personally and hear from their head of state.
Perhaps they fear they will be charmed by them and might change their minds’.
The row over Charles’ visit came after a number of attacks on British statues in 2024.
This is even though the King has been clear he will not stand in the way if Australia wishes to replace him as the country’s head of state.
In June a statue of King George V was decapitated in Melbourne by vandals from the ‘The Colony Must Fall’ movement who dedicated the attack to King Charles.
And in January attacks on statues of Captain Cook and Queen Victoria before Australia Day sparked more outrage
Recent division has been blamed on the nation’s left-wing Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, who has been accused of bowing to a ‘noisy minority’ spouting ‘woke rubbish’ and virtue-signalling on issues such as climate change and gender.
The attacks on British statues from the 19th century agitation over Charles’ visit give an insight into the increasing wokeifcation of Australia – a country, to the outside world at least, better known for their love of beer, beaches and cricket.
Australia’s Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s premiership was badly hurt after Australians roundly rejected greater rights for Indigenous citizens last October. He has shelved a referendum on Australia becoming a republic
But a new young generation of ‘woke-left noisy activists’ has emerged with children Down Under ‘being taught that their country is shameful and racist’, according to The Wall Street Journal.
Albanese’s critics have said Australia in the midst of a culture war and has become too quick to ‘beat ourselves up’ and apologise for the past as well as ignored the benefits that came from being a colony.
Former prime minister John Howard, who led the country from 1996 to 2007, said last year: ‘I do hold the view that the luckiest thing that happened to this country was being colonised by the British’.
The King will be buoyed by polls in Australia which show support for the monarchy remains high as he’s set to embark on an historic tour of the country on Friday.
It comes after Saturday’s Daily Mail revealed he had written to republican campaigners stressing his ‘deep love’ for the country and that any debate about its future is a matter for them.
Charles is King of Australia and the country’s head of state. In a poll in yesterday’s Daily Telegraph in Sydney, one in four respondents had a more favourable view of King Charles now than they did before he was crowned, with just 5 per cent less positive.
Just one in three thought Australia should become a republic – well down on the 39.4 per cent who voted that way at the country’s referendum in 1999.
It comes as it was revealed that the monarch will pause his cancer treatment during his trip to Australia.
Charles is King of Australia and the country’s head of state. (Pictured: Prince Charles and Queen Camilla greeted by school children)
The 75-year-old monarch will undertake a significant official visit beginning on October 18, taking in Sydney and Canberra, immediately followed by a State Visit to Samoa in the South Pacific where he will attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM).
The Mail understands that His Majesty will continue with his ongoing cancer treatment right up until he flies but that his doctors are happy for it to be briefly stopped while he is away.
The King will then pick up with his treatment cycle as soon as he returns to the UK.
Charles was diagnosed with an undisclosed form of the disease in February following prostate surgery and has been receiving weekly treatment ever since.
However the news that the King intends to ‘squeeze in’ a 30,000 mile, 11-day door-to-door trip in-between treatments is both good news in terms of his health – and also emphasises the commitment to duty he has shown since he was first diagnosed.
Buckingham Palace declined to comment.