{"id":90871,"date":"2024-12-19T09:25:11","date_gmt":"2024-12-19T02:25:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/levanews.com\/?p=45924"},"modified":"2024-12-19T09:25:29","modified_gmt":"2024-12-19T02:25:29","slug":"this-country-filed-a-new-bill-to-remove-king-charles-as-its-head-of-state-minister-explains-details","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/echowoven.com\/this-country-filed-a-new-bill-to-remove-king-charles-as-its-head-of-state-minister-explains-details\/","title":{"rendered":"This Country Filed a New Bill to Remove King Charles as Its Head of State \u2014 Minister Explains Details"},"content":{"rendered":"
As more attention is drawn to the royal family’s wealth, this nation seeks complete independence and attempts to secede from its British monarchy.\n In a crucial step toward becoming a republic, Jamaica has presented a bill to depose King Charles III as its head of state. In response to popular calls by Jamaicans to break their connections with the British monarchy, Minister of Legal and Constitutional Affairs Marlene Malahoo Forte introduced the legislation in parliament.\n Following a lengthy period of British colonial control, there is a push for change. After seizing the island in 1655, England used slave labor to establish a plantation economy centered on sugar, cocoa, and coffee. After slavery was outlawed in 1834, hundreds of people were set free to start small farms.\n The nation became more independent throughout time, joining the Federation of the West Indies in 1958, withdrawing from it in 1961, and becoming a sovereign nation in 1962. Nonetheless, a governor general continued to represent the British queen as the ceremonial head of state.\n “Each year, as we mark our independence on August 6, the nation is encouraged to reflect on our progress since gaining independence and what remains to be accomplished, and annually the question arises: when will we abolish the monarchy and have a Jamaican head of state?” stated Malahoo Forte, as reported by The Guardian on December 13.\n The proposed new legislation seeks to replace the monarchy with a Jamaican president and includes other reforms, such as expanding the senate to include members appointed outside of political parties. However, the process of implementing these changes is complicated.\n The bill must undergo committee review, gain parliamentary approval, and be put to a national referendum before it can become law. Opposition leaders have raised concerns about the lack of judicial reforms in the bill, especially the continued use of the UK-based privy council instead of the Caribbean Court of Justice.\n Senator Donna Scott-Mottley, the opposition spokesperson for justice from the People’s National Party, argued, “We do not believe you can say that you’re fully decolonised if you still retain the privy council as your apex court. So you cannot leave the king but still have to petition him when you want justice to be delivered to your people \u2013 and the privy council as the apex court is an anachronism in this context.”\n However, Scott-Mottley emphasized the need for cross-party support for the bill, noting, “At the end of the day, this is not about political parties, it’s about our nation. It’s about our people and it\u2019s about closing the full circle of independence for the people of our country.”\n In response to these concerns, Malahoo Forte stated that the administration of Prime Minister Andrew Holness has implemented a “phased reform approach,” with plans for judicial changes, including court reforms, to be addressed in a later phase.\n She further explained, “For many years, a lot of work was done, but we have never progressed to getting the bill in parliament. To amend the constitution’s provisions on the monarchy, a bill must be tabled, as these provisions have the highest level of legal protection.”\n Jamaica has tabled a bill to get rid of King Charles as their head of state, meaning the country could become a republic.\n Despite gaining independence in 1962, the Caribbean country is one of many former British colonies that still has the monarch as their head of state. . pic.twitter.com\/AT0lChIjlm\n\n
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