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Monarchy of Canada

The monarchy of Canada is Canada's form of government embodied by the Canadian sovereign and head of state. It is one of the key components of Canadian sovereignty and sits at the core of Canada's constitutional federal structure and Westminster-style parliamentary democracy.[6] The monarchy is the foundation of the executive (King-in-Council), legislative (King-in-Parliament), and judicial (King-on-the-Bench) branches of both federal and provincial jurisdictions.[10] The current monarch is King Charles III, who has reigned since 8 September 2022.[17]

King of Canada
Roi du Canada
Federal
Incumbent
Charles III
since 8 September 2022
Details
StyleHis Majesty
Heir apparentWilliam, Prince of Wales[1]
ResidencesRideau Hall, Ottawa
La Citadelle, Quebec City
Websitecanada.ca/monarchy-crown

Although the person of the sovereign is shared with 14 other independent countries within the Commonwealth of Nations, each country's monarchy is separate and legally distinct.[23] As a result, the current monarch is officially titled King of Canada and, in this capacity, he and other members of the royal family undertake public and private functions domestically and abroad as representatives of Canada. However, the monarch is the only member of the royal family with any constitutional role. The monarch resides predominantly in the United Kingdom and, while several powers are the sovereign's alone, most of the royal governmental and ceremonial duties in Canada are carried out by the monarch's representative, the governor general of Canada.[27] In Canada's provinces, the monarch in right of each is represented by a lieutenant governor. As territories fall under the federal jurisdiction, they each have a commissioner, rather than a lieutenant governor, who represents the federal Crown-in-Council directly.

All executive authority under the Constitution is vested in the sovereign, so the monarch's consent is necessary for letters patent and orders-in-council to have legal effect. As well, the monarch is part of the Parliament of Canada, so royal assent is required to allow for bills to become law. While the power for these acts stems from the Canadian people through the constitutional conventions of democracy,[28] executive authority remains vested in the Crown and is only entrusted by the sovereign to the government on behalf of the people. This underlines the Crown's role in safeguarding the rights, freedoms, and democratic system of government of Canadians, reinforcing the fact that "governments are the servants of the people and not the reverse".[29][30] Thus, within Canada's constitutional monarchy the sovereign's direct participation in any of these areas of governance is normally limited, with the sovereign typically exercising executive authority only with the advice and consent of the Cabinet of Canada, and the sovereign's legislative and judicial responsibilities largely carried out through the Parliament of Canada as well as judges and justices of the peace.[29] There are, though, cases where the sovereign or their representative would have a duty to act directly and independently under the doctrine of necessity to prevent genuinely unconstitutional acts.[31][32] In these respects, the sovereign and his viceroys are custodians of the Crown's reserve powers and represent the "power of the people above government and political parties".[33][34] Put another way, the Crown functions as the guarantor of Canada's continuous and stable governance and as a nonpartisan safeguard against the abuse of power.[37] Despite its pivotal constitutional functions, the monarchy remains widely misunderstood by not only the Canadian public, but also many politicians.

Canada is one of the oldest extant monarchies in the world.[19][38] Established in the 16th century,[n 1] the monarchy has evolved through a continuous succession of initially French and later British sovereigns into the independent Canadian sovereigns of today.[59] No part of Canada has been a republic or part of a republic;[60] though, there have been isolated calls for the country to become one. The Crown, however, is considered to be "entrenched" into the governmental framework.[64] The institution that is Canada's system of constitutional monarchy is sometimes colloquially referred to as the Maple Crown[n 2] or Crown of Maples,[68] Canada having developed a "recognizably Canadian brand of monarchy".[69]

Though not part of the Canadian monarchy, either past or present, Canada has an even older tradition of hereditary chieftainship in some First Nations, which has been likened to non-sovereign monarchy and today exists in parallel with the Canadian Crown and individual band governments. All three entities are components of the nation-to-nation relationship between the Crown and First Nations in upholding treaty rights and obligations developed over the centuries.

International and domestic aspects edit

 
  Commonwealth realms
  Overseas territories of Commonwealth realms

The 15 realms of which King Charles III is the reigning sovereign

The person who is the Canadian sovereign is equally shared with 14 other monarchies (a grouping, including Canada, known informally as the Commonwealth realms) in the 56-member Commonwealth of Nations. The monarch resides predominantly in the oldest and most populous realm, the United Kingdom; viceroys (the governor general of Canada in the federal sphere and a lieutenant governor in each province) are the sovereign's representatives in Canada. The emergence of this arrangement paralleled the fruition of Canadian nationalism following the end of the First World War and culminated in the passage of the Statute of Westminster in 1931.[70] Since then, the pan-national Crown has had both a shared and a separate character: the sovereign's role as monarch of Canada has been distinct from his or her position as monarch of any other realm,[n 3][73] including the United Kingdom.[n 4][79] Only Canadian federal ministers of the Crown may advise the sovereign on any and all matters of the Canadian state,[n 5][85] of which the sovereign, when not in Canada, is kept abreast by weekly communications with the federal viceroy.[86] The monarchy thus ceased to be an exclusively British institution and in Canada became a Canadian,[90] or "domesticated",[91] establishment, though it is still often denoted as "British" in both legal and common language,[46] for reasons historical, political, and of convenience.

 
A Royal Canadian Air Force Royal Flight, used to transport the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge during their 2011 royal tour of Canada.

This division is illustrated in a number of ways: The sovereign, for example, holds a unique Canadian title and,[92] when he and other members of the royal family are acting in public specifically as representatives of Canada, they use, where possible, Canadian symbols, including the country's national flag, unique royal symbols, armed forces uniforms,[97] and the like, as well as Canadian Forces aircraft or other Canadian-owned vehicles for travel.[98] Once in Canadian airspace, or arrived at a Canadian event taking place abroad, the Canadian secretary to the King, officers of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP), and other Canadian officials will take over from whichever of their other realms' counterparts were previously escorting the King or other member of the royal family.[98][99]

The sovereign similarly only draws from Canadian funds for support in the performance of his duties when in Canada or acting as King of Canada abroad; Canadians do not pay any money to the King or any other member of the royal family, either towards personal income or to support royal residences outside of Canada.[100][101]

There are five aspects to the monarchy of Canada: 1. The constitutional monarchy: the use of the royal prerogative in summoning and dissolving parliament, granting royal assent, issuing orders-in-council, etcetera. 2. The national monarchy: for example, delivering the Speech from the Throne and the Royal Christmas Message, distributing honours, decorations, and medals, and partaking in Remembrance Day ceremonies. 3. The international monarchy: the monarch being head of state of each of the 15 Commonwealth realms, holding the position of head of the Commonwealth, attending heads of government meetings and Commonwealth Games, and so on. 4. The religious monarchy: the monarch having in his title the words by the grace of god, the Act of Settlement, 1701, requiring the sovereign to be Anglican, and the monarch encouraging people "to tolerate, accept, and understand cultures, beliefs, and faiths different from our own". 5. The welfare and service monarchy: seen in members of the royal family founding charities and supporting others, fundraising for charity, and giving royal patronage to civil and military organizations.[102]

Succession and regency edit

 
Sophia, Electress of Hanover, from whom heirs to the throne must directly descend
 
Prince William, Prince of Wales, the present heir apparent to the Canadian throne

As in the other Commonwealth realms, the current heir apparent to the Canadian throne is William, Prince of Wales, who is followed in the line of succession by his eldest child, Prince George.

Demise of the Crown and accession edit

Upon the death of the monarch, there is a demise (transfer) of the Crown: the late sovereign's heir immediately and automatically succeeds;[105] hence arises the phrase, "the King is dead. Long live the King".[106][107] There has been no interregnum between the death of one king or queen and the accession of the next since at least the reign of Edward I,[108] 225 years before John Cabot landed on the east coast of what is today Canada. No confirmation or further ceremony is necessary; the federal Cabinet and civil service will, though, follow the Manual of Official Procedure of the Government of Canada in carrying out various formalities around the late monarch's death and the new monarch's assumption of the throne.[109]

It has been customary for the accession to be publicly proclaimed by the governor general-in council, who meet at Rideau Hall immediately upon the previous monarch's death.[109] Since Edward VIII took the throne in 1936, it has been "constitutionally inappropriate" for Canada's accession proclamations to be approved by a British order-in-council,[72] as the monarch has, since then, assumed the Canadian throne according to Canadian law. At the accession of Charles III, the first since the creation of the Canadian Heraldic Authority in 1989, the Chief Herald read the royal proclamation aloud. If Parliament is in session, the Prime Minister will announce the demise of the Crown there and move for a joint address of sympathy and loyalty to the new monarch.[109]

 
A memorial procession in Ottawa before the national commemoration ceremony for the death of Queen Elizabeth II

An appropriate period of mourning also follows, during which portraits of the recently deceased monarch are draped with black fabric and staff at government houses wear customary black armbands. The Manual of Official Procedure of the Government of Canada states that the prime minister is responsible for convening Parliament, tabling a resolution of loyalty and condolence from Parliament to the new monarch, and arranging for the motion to be seconded by the leader of the official opposition.[103][110] The prime minister will then move to adjourn Parliament.[103][110] The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation keeps a regularly updated plan for a "broadcast of national importance", announcing the demise of a sovereign and covering the aftermath, during which all regular programming and advertising is cancelled and on-call commentators contribute to a 24-hour news mode.[103] As the late sovereign is typically buried in the UK, the federal and provincial governments will organize commemoration ceremonies, involving religious services, eulogies, and military parades. Such ceremonies may also be held for other recently deceased members of the royal family. The day of the sovereign's funeral is likely to be a public holiday.[103]

The new monarch is crowned in the United Kingdom in a ritual which is ancient but not necessary for a sovereign to reign.[n 6] Under the federal Interpretation Act,[109] officials who hold a federal office under the Crown are not affected by the death of the monarch, nor are they required to take the Oath of Allegiance again.[111] In some provinces, though, those holding Crown offices must swear the Oath to the new sovereign.[112] All references in federal legislation to previous monarchs, whether in the masculine (e.g. his majesty) or feminine (e.g. the queen), continue to mean the reigning sovereign of Canada, regardless of his or her gender.[113] This is because, in common law, the Crown never dies. After an individual accedes to the throne, he or she usually continues to reign until death.[n 7]

Legal aspects of succession edit

 
A copy of the Act of Settlement, 1701

The relationship between the Commonwealth realms is such that any change to the rules of succession to their respective crowns requires the unanimous consent of all the realms. Succession is governed by statutes, such as the Bill of Rights, 1689, the Act of Settlement, 1701, and the Acts of Union, 1707.

 
Prime Minister of Canada Mackenzie King (left) and Edward VIII (right; when Prince of Wales) in Ottawa, 1924. In 1936, Edward abdicated the Canadian throne and he and any of his descendants were removed from the line of succession by Order-in-Council PC 3144 and the Succession to the Throne Act, 1937.

King Edward VIII abdicated in 1936 and any possible future descendants of his were excluded from the line of succession.[114] The British government at the time, wishing for speed so as to avoid embarrassing debate in Dominion parliaments, suggested that the governments of the Dominions of the British Commonwealth—then Australia, New Zealand, the Irish Free State, the Union of South Africa, and Canada—regard whoever was monarch of the UK to automatically be monarch of their respective Dominion. As with the other Dominion governments, the Canadian Cabinet, headed by Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King, refused to accept the idea and stressed that the laws of succession were part of Canadian law and, as the Statute of Westminster 1931 disallowed the UK from legislating for Canada, including in relation to succession,[115] altering them required Canada's request and consent to the British legislation (His Majesty's Declaration of Abdication Act, 1936) becoming part of Canadian law.[116] Sir Maurice Gwyer, first parliamentary counsel in the UK, reflected this position, stating the Act of Settlement was a part of the law in each Dominion.[116] Thus, Order-in-Council P.C. 3144[117] was issued, expressing the Cabinet's request and consent for His Majesty's Declaration of Abdication Act, 1936, to become part of the laws of Canada and the Succession to the Throne Act, 1937, gave parliamentary ratification to that action, together bringing the Act of Settlement and Royal Marriages Act, 1772, into Canadian law.[118][119] The latter was deemed by the Cabinet in 1947 to be part of Canadian law.[n 8][120] The Department of External Affairs included all succession-related laws in its list of acts within Canadian law.

The Supreme Court of Canada declared unanimously in the 1981 Patriation Reference that the Bill of Rights, 1689, is "undoubtedly in force as part of the law of Canada".[122][123] Furthermore, in O'Donohue v. Canada (2003) the Ontario Superior Court of Justice found that the Act of Settlement, 1701, is "part of the laws of Canada" and the rules of succession are "by necessity incorporated into the Constitution of Canada".[124] Another ruling of the Ontario Superior Court, in 2014, echoed the 2003 case, stating that the Act of Settlement "is an imperial statute which ultimately became part of the law of Canada."[125] Upon dismissing appeal of that case, the Court of Appeal of Ontario stated "[t]he rules of succession are a part of the fabric of the constitution of Canada and incorporated into it".[126]

In a meeting of the Special Joint Committee on the Constitution during the process of patriating the Canadian constitution in 1981, John Munro asked then-Minister of Justice Jean Chrétien about the "selective omissions" of the Succession to the Throne Act, 1937, the Demise of the Crown Act, 1901, the Seals Act, the Governor General's Act, and the Royal Style and Titles Act, 1953, from the schedule to the Constitution Act, 1982. In response, Chrétien asserted that the schedule to the Constitution Act, 1982, was not exhaustive, outlining that section 52(2) of the Constitution Act, 1982, says "[t]he Constitution of Canada includes [...] the acts and orders referred to the schedule" and "[w]hen you use the word 'includes' [...] it means that if ever there is another thing related to the Canadian constitution as part of it, should have been there, or might have been there, it is covered. So we do not have to renumerate [sic] the ones that you are mentioning."[127] In the same meeting, Deputy Attorney General Barry Strayer stated: "Clause 52(2) is not an exhaustive definition of the Constitution of Canada so that while we have certain things listed in the schedule which are clearly part of the constitution, that does not mean that there are not other things which are part of the constitution [...] [The schedule] is not an exhaustive list."[127]

 
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The throne of Canada (left) and throne for the royal consort (right)—both commissioned in 1878—behind the speaker's chair in the Senate
 
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The sovereign's throne (left) and royal consort's throne (right) behind the speaker's chair—all made in 2017—in the temporary Senate chamber

Leslie Zines claimed in the 1991 publication, Constitutional Change in the Commonwealth, that, though the succession to Canada's throne was outlined by common law and the Act of Settlement, 1701, these were not part of the Canadian constitution, which "does not contain rules for succession to the throne."[128] Richard Toporoski, writing three years later for the Monarchist League of Canada, stated, "there is no existing provision in our law, other than the Act of Settlement, 1701, that provides that the king or queen of Canada shall be the same person as the king or queen of the United Kingdom. If the British law were to be changed and we did not change our law [...] the person provided for in the new law would become king or queen in at least some realms of the Commonwealth; Canada would continue on with the person who would have become monarch under the previous law."[129]

Canada, with the other Commonwealth realms, committed to the 2011 Perth Agreement, which proposed changes to the rules governing succession to remove male preference and removal of disqualification arising from marriage to a Roman Catholic. As a result of the Perth Agreement, the Canadian Parliament passed the Succession to the Throne Act, 2013, which gave the country's assent to the Succession to the Crown Bill, at that time proceeding in the Parliament of the United Kingdom. In dismissing a challenge to the law on the basis that a change to the succession in Canada would require unanimous consent of all provinces under section 41(a) of the Constitution Act, 1982, Quebec Superior Court Justice Claude Bouchard ruled that Canada "did not have to change its laws nor its constitution for the British royal succession rules to be amended and effective" and constitutional convention committed Canada to having a line of succession symmetrical to those of other Commonwealth realms.[130][131] The ruling was upheld by the Quebec Court of Appeal.[132] The Supreme Court of Canada declined to hear an appeal in April 2020.[133]

Constitutional scholar Philippe Lagassé argues that, in light of the Succession to the Throne Act, 2013, and court rulings upholding that law, section 41(a) of the Constitution Act, 1982, which requires a constitutional amendment passed with the unanimous consent of the provinces, applies only to the "office of the Queen", but not who holds that office, and that therefore "ending the principle of symmetry with the United Kingdom can be done with the general amending procedure, or even by Parliament alone under section 44 of the Constitution Act, 1982."[133][134]

Ted McWhinney, another constitutional scholar, argued that a then-future government of Canada could begin a process of phasing out the monarchy after the death of Elizabeth II "quietly and without fanfare by simply failing legally to proclaim any successor to the Queen in relation to Canada". This would, he claimed, be a way of bypassing the need for a constitutional amendment that would require unanimous consent by the federal Parliament and all the provincial legislatures.[135] However, Ian Holloway, Dean of Law at the University of Western Ontario, criticized McWhinney's proposal for its ignorance of provincial input and opined that its implementation "would be contrary to the plain purpose of those who framed our system of government."[136]

Certain aspects of the succession rules have been challenged in the courts. For example, under the provisions of the Bill of Rights, 1689, and the Act of Settlement, 1701, Catholics are barred from succeeding to the throne; this prohibition has been upheld twice by Canadian courts, once in 2003 and again in 2014.[141]

Regency edit

 
 
Prince George, Prince Regent (left), Canada's last regent, serving as such from 1811 until the death of his father, George III (right), in 1820

Canada has no laws allowing for a regency, should the sovereign be a minor or debilitated;[86] none have been passed by the Canadian Parliament and it was made clear by successive cabinets since 1937 that the United Kingdom's Regency Act had no applicability to Canada,[86] as the Canadian Cabinet had not requested otherwise when the act was passed that year and again in 1943 and 1953. As the Letters Patent, 1947, issued by King George VI permit the governor general of Canada to exercise almost all of the monarch's powers in respect of Canada, the viceroy is expected to continue to act as the personal representative of the monarch, and not any regent, even if the monarch is a child or incapacitated.[144]

This has led to the question of whether the governor general has the ability to remove themselves and appoint their viceregal successor in the monarch's name. While Lagassé argued that appears to be the case,[134] both the Canadian Manual of Official Procedures, published in 1968, and the Privy Council Office took the opposite opinion.[145][146] Lagassé and Patrick Baud claimed changes could be made to regulations to allow a governor general to appoint the next governor general;[147] Christopher McCreery, however, criticised the theory, arguing it is impractical to suggest that a governor general would remove him or herself on ministerial advice,[148] with the consequence that, if a prolonged regency occurred, it would remove one of the checks and balances in the constitution.[149] The intent expressed whenever the matter of regency came up among Commonwealth realm heads of government was that the relevant parliament (other than the United Kingdom's) would pass a bill if the need for a regency arose and the pertinent governor-general would already be empowered to grant royal assent to it.[150] The governor general appointing their successor is not a power that has been utilized to date.[134]

Foreign visits edit

 
King Edward VIII in Vimy, France, 1936
 
Queen Elizabeth II in Chicago, United States, 1959
 
Queen Elizabeth II in Beny-sur-Mer, France, 1984

The following state and official visits to foreign countries have been made by the monarch as the sovereign of Canada:

Visit to Date Monarch of Canada Received by Type
  France 26 July 1936 King Edward VIII President Albert Lebrun Official[154]
  United States 7–11 June 1939 King George VI President Franklin D. Roosevelt State[158]
  United States 17 October 1957 Queen Elizabeth II President Dwight D. Eisenhower State[162]
  United States 26 June 1959 Official[163][164]
  United States 6 July 1959 Governor William Stratton State[167]
  France 6 June 1984 President François Mitterrand Official[171]
  France 1994 Official[164][170]
  France 6 June 2004 President Jacques Chirac Official[172][164]
  France 9 April 2007 Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin Official[173]
  United States 6 July 2010 Governor David Paterson Official[157][174]

Federal and provincial aspects edit

 
The one federal and 10 provincial viceroys, along with the three territorial commissioners, at their annual meeting in 2016, accompanied by their respective partners and secretaries

The origins of Canada's sovereignty lie in the early 17th century, during which time the monarch in England fought with parliament there over who had ultimate authority, culminating in the Glorious Revolution in 1688 and the subsequent Bill of Rights, 1689, which, as mentioned elsewhere in this article, is today part of Canadian constitutional law. This brought to Canada the British notion of the supremacy of parliament—of which the monarch is a part—and it was carried into each of the provinces upon their establishment. That, however, was superseded when the Charter of Rights and Freedoms (within the Constitution Act, 1982) introduced into Canada the American idea of the supremacy of the law.[175] Still, the King remains the sovereign of Canada.[n 9][177]

Canada's monarchy was established at Confederation, when its executive government and authority were declared, in section 9 of the Constitution Act, 1867, to continue and be vested in the monarch. Placing such power, along with legislative power, with the tangible, living Queen, rather than the abstract and inanimate Crown, was a deliberate choice by the framers of the constitution.[178] Still, the Crown is the foundation of the country[179][180] as "the very centre of [Canada's] constitution and democracy."[179] Although Canada is a federation, the Canadian monarchy is unitary throughout all jurisdictions in the country,[181] the sovereignty of the different administrations being passed on through the overreaching Crown itself as a part of the executive, legislative, and judicial operations in each of the federal and provincial spheres[182] and the headship of state being a part of all equally.[181] The Crown thus links the various governments into a federal state,[8] while it is simultaneously also "divided" into 11 legal jurisdictions, or 11 "crowns"—one federal and 10 provincial[183]—with the monarch taking on a distinct legal persona in each.[n 10][n 11] As such, the constitution instructs that any change to the position of the monarch or his or her representatives in Canada requires the consent of the Senate, the House of Commons, and the legislative assemblies of all the provinces.[186] The Crown, being shared and balanced,[180] provides the bedrock upon which all of Canada's different regions and peoples can live together peacefully[187] and was said by David E. Smith, in 2017, to be the "keystone of the constitutional architecture" of Canada.[188]

 
The Royal Window in the foyer of Rideau Hall, commemorating Queen Elizabeth II's Ruby Jubilee. At centre is the Royal Coat of Arms of Canada surrounded by the shields of each of the sovereign's 10 provincial and then-two territorial coats of arms.

The Crown is located beyond politics, existing to give authority to and protect the constitution and system of governance.[179] Power, therefore, rests with an institution that "functions to safeguard it on behalf of all its citizens", rather than any singular individual.[189] The sovereign and his representatives typically "act by 'not acting'"[n 12]—holding power, but, not exercising it—both because they are unelected figures and to maintain their neutrality, "deliberately, insistently, and resolutely",[191] in case they have to be an impartial arbiter in a constitutional crisis and ensure that normal democratic discourse can resume.[194] Consequently, the Crown performs two functions:[195] as a unifying symbol and a protector of democratic rights and freedoms,[180] "tightly woven into the fabric of the Canadian constitution."[195]

At the same time, a number of freedoms granted by the constitution to all other Canadians are denied to, or limited for, the monarch and the other senior members of the royal family: freedom of religion, freedom of expression, freedom to travel, freedom to choose a career, freedom to marry, and freedom of privacy and family life.[196]

While the Crown is empowered by statute and the royal prerogative, it also enjoys inherent powers not granted by either.[197] The Court of Appeal of British Columbia ruled in 1997 that "the Crown has the capacities and powers of a natural person"[198] and its actions as a natural person are, as with the actions of any natural person, subject to judicial review.[199] Further, it was determined in R. v Secretary of State for Health the ex parte C that, "as a matter of capacity, no doubt, [the Crown] has power to do whatever a private person can do. But, as an organ of government, it can only exercise those powers for the public benefit, and for identifiably 'governmental' purposes within limits set by the law."[200] Similarly, use of the royal prerogative is justiciable,[201] though, only when the "subject matter affects the rights or legitimate expectations of an individual".[202]

The governor general is appointed by the monarch on the advice of his federal prime minister and the lieutenant governors are appointed by the governor general on the advice of the federal prime minister. The commissioners of Canada's territories are appointed by the federal governor-in-council, at the recommendation of the minister of Crown–Indigenous relations, but, as the territories are not sovereign entities, the commissioners are not personal representatives of the sovereign. The Advisory Committee on Vice-Regal Appointments, which may seek input from the relevant premier and provincial or territorial community, proposes candidates for appointment as governor general, lieutenant governor, and commissioner.[203][204]

Sovereign immunity edit

It has been held since 1918 that the federal Crown is immune from provincial law.[205] Constitutional convention has also held that the Crown in right of each province is outside the jurisdiction of the courts in other provinces. This view, however, has been questioned.[206]

Lieutenant governors do not enjoy the same immunity as the sovereign in matters not relating to the powers of the viceregal office, as decided in the case of former Lieutenant Governor of Quebec Lise Thibault, who had been accused of misappropriating public funds.[207]

Personification of the Canadian state edit

 
 
 
 
Elizabeth II, Queen of Canada, depicted on various Canadian stamps through the 1960s and 1970s

As the living embodiment of the Crown,[113][208] the sovereign is regarded as the personification of the Canadian state[n 13][222] and is meant to represent all Canadians, regardless of political affiliation.[223] As such, he, along with his or her viceregal representatives, must "remain strictly neutral in political terms".[89]

The person of the reigning sovereign thus holds two distinct personas in constant coexistence, an ancient theory of the "King's two bodies"—the body natural (subject to infirmity and death) and the body politic (which never dies).[224] The Crown and the monarch are "conceptually divisible but legally indivisible [...] The office cannot exist without the office-holder",[n 14][70] so, even in private, the monarch is always "on duty".[213] The terms the state, the Crown,[226] the Crown in Right of Canada, His Majesty the King in Right of Canada (French: Sa Majesté le Roi du chef du Canada),[227] and similar are all synonymous and the monarch's legal personality is sometimes referred to simply as Canada.[215][228]

The king or queen of Canada is thus the employer of all government officials and staff (including the viceroys, judges, members of the Canadian Forces, police officers, and parliamentarians),[n 15] the guardian of foster children (Crown wards), as well as the owner of all state lands (Crown land), buildings and equipment (Crown held property),[230] state owned companies (Crown corporations), and the copyright for all government publications (Crown copyright).[231] This is all in his or her position as sovereign, and not as an individual; all such property is held by the Crown in perpetuity and cannot be sold by the sovereign without the proper advice and consent of his or her ministers.

 
A photo portrait of Queen Elizabeth II stands at the front of a citizenship ceremony led by Lieutenant Governor of Ontario Elizabeth Dowdeswell, illustrating the sovereign as the focus of the Oath of Citizenship

The monarch is at the apex of the Canadian order of precedence and, as the embodiment of the state, is also the focus of oaths of allegiance,[n 16][235] required of many of the aforementioned employees of the Crown, as well as by new citizens, as by the Oath of Citizenship. Allegiance is given in reciprocation to the sovereign's Coronation Oath,[236] wherein he or she promises "to govern the Peoples of [...] Canada [...] according to their respective laws and customs".[237]

Head of state edit

Although it has been argued that the term head of state is a republican one inapplicable in a constitutional monarchy such as Canada, where the monarch is the embodiment of the state and thus cannot be head of it,[213] the sovereign is regarded by official government sources,[241] judges,[242] constitutional scholars,[215][243] and pollsters as the head of state,[244] while the governor general and lieutenant governors are all only representatives of, and thus equally subordinate to, that figure.[245] Some governors general, their staff, government publications,[215] and constitutional scholars like Ted McWhinney and C.E.S. Franks have,[246][247] however, referred to the position of governor general as that of Canada's head of state;[248][249] though, sometimes qualifying the assertion with de facto or effective;[253] Franks has hence recommended that the governor general be named officially as the head of state.[247] Still others view the role of head of state as being shared by both the sovereign and his viceroys.[257] Since 1927, governors general have been received on state visits abroad as though they were heads of state.[258]

 
Then-Governor General David Johnston reviews the guard of honour at Rashtrapati Bhavan during a state visit to India, 24 February 2014

Officials at Rideau Hall have attempted to use the Letters Patent, 1947, as justification for describing the governor general as head of state. However, the document makes no such distinction,[259] nor does it effect an abdication of the sovereign's powers in favour of the viceroy,[86] as it only allows the governor general to "act on the Queen's behalf".[260][261] D. Michael Jackson, former Chief of Protocol of Saskatchewan, argued that Rideau Hall had been attempting to "recast" the governor general as head of state since the 1970s and doing so preempted both the Queen and all of the lieutenant governors.[245] This caused not only "precedence wars" at provincial events (where the governor general usurped the lieutenant governor's proper spot as most senior official in attendance)[262][263] and Governor General Adrienne Clarkson to accord herself precedence before the Queen at a national occasion,[264] but also constitutional issues by "unbalancing [...] the federalist symmetry".[181][265] This has been regarded as both a natural evolution and as a dishonest effort to alter the constitution without public scrutiny.[259][266]

In a poll conducted by Ipsos-Reid following the first prorogation of the 40th parliament on 4 December 2008, it was found that 42 per cent of the sample group thought the prime minister was head of state, while 33 per cent felt it was the governor general. Only 24 per cent named the Queen as head of state,[244] a number up from 2002, when the results of an EKOS Research Associates survey showed only 5 per cent of those polled knew the Queen was head of state (69 per cent answered that it was the prime minister).[267]

Arms edit

 
The royal standard of Charles III, King of Canada, employing the shield of the royal arms in banner form

The Arms of His Majesty the King in Right of Canada is the arms of dominion of the Canadian monarch and, thus, equally the official coat of arms of Canada[268][269] and a symbol of national sovereignty.[270] It is closely modelled after the royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom, with French and distinctive Canadian elements replacing or added to those derived from the British version, which was employed in Canada before the granting of the Canadian arms in 1921.[271] The arms were augmented with the annulus behind the shield bearing the motto of the Order of CanadaDesiderantes meliorem patriam.[272]

The royal standard is the monarch's official flag, which depicts the royal arms in banner form.[273] It takes precedence above all other flags in Canada—including the national flag and those of the other members of the royal family[44]—and is typically flown from buildings, vessels, and vehicles in which the sovereign is present (although exceptions have been made for its use when the monarch is not in attendance). The royal standard is never flown at half-mast because there is always a sovereign: when one dies, his or her successor becomes the sovereign instantly. Elements of the royal arms have also been incorporated into the governor general's flag; similarly, the flags of the lieutenant governors employ the shields of the relevant provincial coat of arms.

Federal constitutional role edit

Canada's constitution is based on the Westminster parliamentary model, wherein the role of the King is both legal and practical, but not political.[89] The sovereign is vested with all the powers of state, collectively known as the royal prerogative,[274] leading the populace to be considered subjects of the Crown.[275] However, as the sovereign's power stems from the people[30][276] and the monarch is a constitutional one, he or she does not rule alone, as in an absolute monarchy. Instead, the Crown is regarded as a corporation sole, with the monarch being the centre of a construct in which the power of the whole is shared by multiple institutions of government[179]—the executive, legislative, and judicial[9]—acting under the sovereign's authority,[215][277] which is entrusted for exercise by the politicians (the elected and appointed parliamentarians and the ministers of the Crown generally drawn from among them) and the judges and justices of the peace.[29] The monarchy has thus been described as the underlying principle of Canada's institutional unity and the monarch as a "guardian of constitutional freedoms"[48][233] whose "job is to ensure that the political process remains intact and is allowed to function."[89]

 
The Great Seal of Canada used during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II

The Great Seal of Canada "signifies the power and authority of the Crown flowing from the sovereign to [the] parliamentary government"[278] and is applied to state documents such as royal proclamations and letters patent commissioning Cabinet ministers, senators, judges, and other senior government officials.[279] The "lending" of royal authority to Cabinet is illustrated by the great seal being entrusted by the governor general, the official keeper of the seal, to the minister of innovation, science, and economic development, who is ex officio the registrar general of Canada.[279] Upon a change of government, the seal is temporarily returned to the governor general and then "lent" to the next incoming registrar general.[278]

The Crown is the pinnacle of the Canadian Armed Forces, with the constitution placing the monarch in the position of commander-in-chief of the entire force, though the governor general carries out the duties attached to the position and also bears the title of Commander-in-Chief in and over Canada.[280]

Executive (King-in-Council) edit

 
The first meeting of the Queen's Privy Council for Canada before the reigning sovereign, Queen Elizabeth II, in the State Dining Room of Rideau Hall, 14 October 1957
 
Elizabeth II with her Cabinet in the ballroom of Rideau Hall, on Dominion Day, 1 July 1967, the centennial of Confederation

The government of Canada—formally termed His Majesty's Government[281]—is defined by the constitution as the King acting on the advice of his Privy Council;[285] what is technically known as the King-in-Council,[8] or sometimes the Governor-in-Council,[113] referring to the governor general as the King's stand-in, though, a few tasks must be specifically performed by, or bills that require assent from, the King.[288] One of the main duties of the Crown is to "ensure that a democratically elected government is always in place,"[256] which means appointing a prime minister to thereafter head the Cabinet[289]—a committee of the Privy Council charged with advising the Crown on the exercise of the royal prerogative.[284] The monarch is informed by his viceroy of the swearing-in and resignation of prime ministers and other members of the ministry,[289] remains fully briefed through regular communications from his Canadian ministers, and holds audience with them whenever possible.[238] By convention, the content of these communications and meetings remains confidential so as to protect the impartiality of the monarch and his representative.[89][290] The appropriateness and viability of this tradition in an age of social media has been questioned.[291][292]

In the construct of constitutional monarchy and responsible government, the ministerial advice tendered is typically binding,[293] meaning the monarch reigns but does not rule,[294] the Cabinet ruling "in trust" for the monarch.[295] This has been the case in Canada since the Treaty of Paris ended the reign of the territory's last absolute monarch, King Louis XV of France. However, the royal prerogative belongs to the Crown and not to any of the ministers[297] and the royal and viceroyal figures may unilaterally use these powers in exceptional constitutional crisis situations (an exercise of the reserve powers),[n 17] thereby allowing the monarch to make sure "the government conducts itself in compliance with the constitution";[256] he and the viceroys being guarantors of the government's constitutional, as opposed to democratic, legitimacy and must ensure the continuity of such.[298] Use of the royal prerogative in this manner was seen when the Governor General refused his prime minister's advice to dissolve Parliament in 1926 and when, in 2008, the Governor General took some hours to decide whether or not to accept her Prime Minister's advice to prorogue Parliament to avoid a vote of non-confidence.[299][300] The prerogative powers have also been used numerous times in the provinces.[299]

The royal prerogative further extends to foreign affairs, including the ratification of treaties, alliances, international agreements, and declarations of war,[301] the accreditation of Canadian high commissioners and ambassadors and receipt of similar diplomats from foreign states,[302][303] and the issuance of Canadian passports,[304] which remain the sovereign's property.[305] It also includes the creation of dynastic and national honours,[306] though only the latter are established on official ministerial advice.

Parliament (King-in-Parliament) edit

 
King George VI, with Queen Elizabeth, grants royal assent to bills in the Senate chamber, 1939

All laws in Canada are the monarch's and the sovereign is one of the three components of the Parliament of Canada[307][308]—formally called the King-in-Parliament[8]—but, the monarch and viceroy do not participate in the legislative process, save for royal consent, typically expressed by a minister of the Crown,[309] and royal assent, which is necessary for a bill to be enacted as law. Either figure or a delegate may perform this task and the constitution allows the viceroy the option of deferring assent to the sovereign.[310]

The governor general is further responsible for summoning the House of Commons, while either the viceroy or monarch can prorogue and dissolve the legislature, after which the governor general usually calls for a general election. This element of the royal prerogative is unaffected by legislation "fixing" election dates, as An Act to Amend the Canada Elections Act specifies that it does not curtail the Crown's powers.[311] The new parliamentary session is marked by either the monarch, governor general, or some other representative reading the Speech from the Throne.[312] Members of Parliament must recite the Oath of Allegiance before they may take their seat. Further, the official opposition is traditionally dubbed as His Majesty's Loyal Opposition,[315] illustrating that, while its members are opposed to the incumbent government, they remain loyal to the sovereign (as personification of the state and its authority).[316]

The monarch does not have the prerogative to impose and collect new taxes without the authorization of an act of Parliament. The consent of the Crown must, however, be obtained before either of the houses of Parliament may even debate a bill affecting the sovereign's prerogatives or interests and no act of Parliament binds the King or his rights unless the act states that it does.[317][318]

Courts (King-on-the-Bench) edit

 
A Supreme Court of Canada courtroom displaying on the focal wall a rendition of the Royal Arms.

The sovereign is responsible for rendering justice for all his subjects and is thus traditionally deemed the fount of justice[319] and his position in the Canadian courts formally dubbed the King on the Bench.[8] The Arms of His Majesty in Right of Canada are traditionally displayed in Canadian courtrooms,[320] as is a portrait of the sovereign.[321] The badge of the Supreme Court also bears a St. Edward's Crown to symbolize the source of the court's authority.

The monarch does not personally rule in judicial cases; this function of the royal prerogative is instead performed in trust and in the King's name by officers of His Majesty's court.[319] Common law holds the notion that the sovereign "can do no wrong": the monarch cannot be prosecuted in his own courts—judged by himself—for criminal offences under his own laws.[322] Canada inherited the common law version of Crown immunity from British law.[323] However, over time, the scope of said immunity has been steadily reduced by statute law. With the passage of relevant legislation through the provincial and federal parliaments, the Crown in its public capacity (that is, lawsuits against the King-in-Council), in all areas of Canada, is now liable in tort, as any normal person would be;[323] civil lawsuits against the Crown are permitted, but lawsuits against the monarch personally are not cognizable. In international cases, as a sovereign and under established principles of international law, the King of Canada is not subject to suit in foreign courts without his express consent.[282]

Within the royal prerogative is also the granting of immunity from prosecution,[324] mercy, and pardoning offences against the Crown.[325][326] Since 1878, the prerogative of pardon has always been exercised upon the recommendation of ministers.[327]

The Crown and indigenous peoples edit

 
Mi'kmaq leaders present a portrait of Grand Chief Henri Membertou to Queen Elizabeth II in Halifax, Nova Scotia, 28 June 2010

Included in Canada's constitution are the various treaties between the Crown and Canada's First Nations, Inuit, and Métis peoples, who, like the Māori and the Treaty of Waitangi in New Zealand,[328] generally view the affiliation as being not between them and the ever-changing Cabinet, but instead with the continuous Crown of Canada, as embodied in the reigning sovereign,[329] meaning the link between monarch and indigenous peoples in Canada will theoretically last for "as long as the sun shines, grass grows, and rivers flow."[330][331]

The association stretches back to the first decisions between North American indigenous peoples and European colonialists and, over centuries of interface, treaties were established concerning the monarch and indigenous nations. The only treaties that survived the American Revolution are those in Canada, which date to the beginning of the 18th century. Today, the main guide for relations between the monarchy and Canadian First Nations is King George III's Royal Proclamation of 1763;[332][333] while not a treaty, it is regarded by First Nations as their Magna Carta or "Indian bill of rights",[333][334] as it affirmed native title to their lands and made clear that, though under the sovereignty of the Crown, the aboriginal bands were autonomous political units in a "nation-to-nation" association with non-native governments,[335][336] with the monarch as the intermediary.[337] The agreements with the Crown are administered by aboriginal law and overseen by the minister of Crown-indigenous relations.[338][339]

I have greatly appreciated the opportunity to discuss [...] the vital process of reconciliation in this country—not a one-off act, of course, but an ongoing commitment to healing, respect and understanding [...] with indigenous and non-indigenous peoples across Canada committing to reflect honestly and openly on the past and to forge a new relationship for the future.[340]

Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, 2022

The link between the Crown and indigenous peoples will sometimes be symbolically expressed through ceremony.[341] Gifts have been frequently exchanged and aboriginal titles have been bestowed upon royal and viceregal figures since the early days of indigenous contact with the Crown.[346] As far back as 1710, indigenous leaders have met to discuss treaty business with royal family members or viceroys in private audience and many continue to use their connection to the Crown to further their political aims;[347] public ceremonies attended by the monarch or another member of the royal family have been employed as a platform on which to present complaints, witnessed by both national and international cameras.[350] Following country-wide protests, beginning in 2012, and the close of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 2015, focus turned toward rapprochement between the nations in the nation-to-nation relationship.[357]

Hereditary chiefs edit

 
 
 
 
Portraits of the Four Mohawk Kings, painted in 1710, during their visit with Queen Anne

The hereditary chiefs are leaders within First Nations who represent different houses or clans and whose chieftaincies are passed down intergenerationally; most First Nations have a hereditary system.[358] The positions are rooted in traditional models of Indigenous governance that predate the colonization of Canada[359][360] and are organized in a fashion similar to the occidental idea of monarchy.[365] Indeed, early European explorers often considered territories belonging to different aboriginal groups to be kingdoms—such as along the north shore of the St. Lawrence River, between the Trinity River and the Isle-aux-Coudres, and the neighbouring "kingdom of Canada", which stretched west to the Island of Montreal[366]—and the leaders of these communities were referred to as kings,[347] particularly those chosen through heredity.[367][368]

Today, the hereditary chiefs are not sovereign; according to the Supreme Court of Canada, the Crown holds sovereignty over the whole of Canada, including reservation and traditional lands.[372] However, by some interpretations of case law from the same court, the chiefs have jurisdiction over traditional territories that fall outside of band-controlled reservation land,[373][374] beyond the elected band councils established by the Indian Act.[375][376] Although recognized by, and accountable to, the federal Crown-in-Council (the Government of Canada), band chiefs do not hold the cultural authority of hereditary chiefs, who often serve as knowledge-keepers, responsible for the upholding of a First Nation's traditional customs, legal systems, and cultural practices.[379] When serving as Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia, Judith Guichon postulated that the role of hereditary chiefs mirrored that of Canada's constitutional monarch, being the representative of "sober second thought and wisdom, not the next political cycle; but, rather, enduring truths and the evolution of our nation through generations."[364] For these reasons, the Crown maintains formal relations with Canada's hereditary chiefs, including on matters relating to treaty rights and obligations.[380]

Cultural role edit

Royal presence and duties edit

 
Prince Albert Edward, Prince of Wales, lays the last stone for the Victoria Bridge in Montreal during his 1860 royal tour

Members of the royal family have been present in Canada since the late 18th century, their reasons including participating in military manoeuvres, serving as the federal viceroy, or undertaking official royal tours, which "reinforce [the] country's collective heritage".[381] At least one royal tour has been conducted every year between 1957 and 2018.[382]

The "welfare and service" function of the monarchy is regarded as an important part of the modern monarchy's role and demonstrates a significant change to the institution in recent generations, from a heavily ceremonialized, imperial crown to a "more demotic and visible" head of state "interacting with the general population far beyond confined court circles."[383] As such, a prominent feature of tours are royal walkabouts; a tradition initiated in 1939 by Queen Elizabeth when she was in Ottawa and broke from the royal party to speak directly to gathered veterans.[384][385] Usually important milestones, anniversaries, or celebrations of Canadian culture will warrant the presence of the monarch,[384] while other members of the royal family will be asked to participate in lesser occasions. A household to assist and tend to the monarch forms part of the royal party.

Official duties involve the sovereign representing the Canadian state at home or abroad, or her relations as members of the royal family participating in government organized ceremonies either in Canada or elsewhere;[n 18][407] sometimes these individuals are employed in asserting Canada's sovereignty over its territories.[n 19] The advice of the Canadian Cabinet is the impetus for royal participation in any Canadian event, though, at present, the Chief of Protocol and his staff in the Department of Canadian Heritage are, as part of the State Ceremonial and Canadian Symbols Program,[409][410] responsible for orchestrating any official events in or for Canada that involve the royal family.[411]

 
Prince Philip with the Royal Canadian Regiment as their colonel-in-chief, April 2013

Conversely, unofficial duties are performed by royal family members for Canadian organizations of which they may be patrons, through their attendance at charity events, visiting with members of the Canadian Forces as colonel-in-chief, or marking certain key anniversaries.[403][404] The invitation and expenses associated with these undertakings are usually borne by the associated organization.[403] In 2005, members of the royal family were present at a total of 76 Canadian engagements, as well as several more through 2006 and 2007.[412] In the period between 2019 and 2022, they carried out 53 engagements, the number reduced, and all through the latter year and a half being virtual, because of restrictions in place during the COVID-19 pandemic.[413] The various viceroys took part in 4,023 engagements through 2019 and 2020, both in-person and virtually.[414]

Apart from Canada, the King and other members of the royal family regularly perform public duties in the other 14 Commonwealth realms in which the King is head of state. This situation, however, can mean the monarch and/or members of the royal family will be promoting one nation and not another; a situation that has been met with criticism.[n 20]

Symbols, associations, and awards edit

The main symbol of the monarchy is the sovereign himself,[179] described as "the personal expression of the Crown in Canada,"[416] and his image is thus used to signify Canadian sovereignty and government authority—his image, for instance, appearing on currency, and his portrait in government buildings.[233] The sovereign is further both mentioned in and the subject of songs, loyal toasts, and salutes.[417] A royal cypher, appearing on buildings and official seals, or a crown, seen on provincial and national coats of arms, as well as police force and Canadian Forces regimental and maritime badges and rank insignia, is also used to illustrate the monarchy as the locus of authority,[418] the latter without referring to any specific monarch.

 
 
 
 
(Clockwise from top) equestrian statue of King Edward VII, Queen's Park, Toronto; George IV's royal charter establishing the University of Toronto; flag of the Canadian Armed Forces, with a St. Edward's Crown atop the forces' emblem; Sovereign's Medal for Volunteers, with the effigy of Elizabeth II wearing a snowflake diadem

Since the days of King Louis XIV,[419] the monarch is the fount of all honours in Canada and the orders,[419][420] decorations, and medals form "an integral element of the Crown."[419] Hence, the insignia and medallions for these awards bear a crown, cypher, and/or portrait of the monarch. Similarly, the country's heraldic authority was created by Queen Elizabeth II and, operating under the authority of the governor general, grants new coats of arms, flags, and badges in Canada. Use of the royal crown in such symbols is a gift from the monarch showing royal support and/or association and requires his approval before being added.[418][421]

Members of the royal family also act as ceremonial colonels-in-chief, commodores-in-chief, captains-general, air commodores-in-chief, generals, and admirals of various elements of the Canadian Forces, reflecting the Crown's relationship with the country's military through participation in events both at home and abroad.[n 21] The monarch also serves as the Commissioner-in-Chief, and Prince Edward and Princess Anne as Honorary Deputy Commissioners, of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.[422]

A number of Canadian civilian organizations have association with the monarchy, either through their being founded via a royal charter, having been granted the right to use the prefix royal before their name, or because at least one member of the royal family serves as a patron. In addition to The Prince's Trust Canada, established by Charles III when Prince of Wales, some other charities and volunteer organizations have also been founded as gifts to, or in honour of, some of Canada's monarchs or members of the royal family, such as the Victorian Order of Nurses, a gift to Queen Victoria for her Diamond Jubilee in 1897; the Canadian Cancer Fund, set up in honour of King George V's Silver Jubilee in 1935; and the Queen Elizabeth II Fund to Aid in Research on the Diseases of Children. A number of awards in Canada are likewise issued in the name of previous or present members of the royal family. Further, organizations will give commemorative gifts to members of the royal family to mark a visit or other important occasion. All Canadian coins bear the image of the monarch reigning at the time of the coin's production, with an inscription, Dei Gratia Rex (often abbreviated to DG Rex), a Latin phrase translated to English as, "by the grace of god, king".[423] During the reign of a female monarch, rex is replaced with regina, which is Latin for queen.

Throughout the 1970s, symbols of the monarch and monarchy were slowly removed from the public eye. For instance, the Queen's portrait was seen less in public schools and the Royal Mail became Canada Post. Smith attributed this to the attitude the government of the day held toward Canada's past;[424] though, it never raised the policy in public or during any of the constitutional conferences held that decade.[129] Andrew Heard argued, however, that dispensing with such symbols was necessary to facilitate the simultaneous increasing embrace of the monarch as Queen of Canada.[425] Emblems such as the Royal Coat of Arms remained, however, and others, such as the monarch's royal standard, were created. With the later developments of the governor general's flag, foundation of the Canadian Heraldic Authority, royal standards for other members of the royal family, and the like, Canada, along with New Zealand, is one of the two realms that have "paid the greatest attention to the nationalization of the visual symbols of the monarchy."[426]

Significance to Canadian identity edit

In his 2018 book, The Canadian Kingdom: 150 Years of Constitutional Monarchy, Jackson wrote that "the Canadian manifestation of the monarchy is not only historical and constitutional, it is political, cultural, and social, reflecting, and contributing to, change and evolution in Canada's governance, autonomy, and identity."[69] Since at least the 1930s,[427] supporters of the Crown have held the opinion that the monarch is a unifying focal point for the nation's "historic consciousness"—the country's heritage being "unquestionably linked with the history of monarchy"[381]—and Canadian patriotism, traditions, and shared values,[381] "around which coheres the nation's sense of a continuing personality".[428] This infusion of monarchy into Canadian governance and society helps strengthen Canadian identity[381] and distinguish it from American identity,[429] a difference that has existed since at least 1864, when it was a factor in the Fathers of Confederation choosing to keep constitutional monarchy for the new country in 1866.[430] Former Governor General Vincent Massey articulated in 1967 that the monarchy "stands for qualities and institutions which mean Canada to every one of us and which, for all our differences and all our variety, have kept Canada Canadian."[431]

I want the Crown in Canada to represent everything that is best and most admired in the Canadian ideal. I will continue to do my best to make it so during my lifetime.[432]

Elizabeth II, 1973

But, Canadians were, through the late 1960s to the 2000s, encouraged by federal and provincial governments to "neglect, ignore, forget, reject, debase, suppress, even hate, and certainly treat as foreign what their parents and grandparents, whether spiritual or blood, regarded as the basis of Canadian nationhood, autonomy, and history", including the monarchy.[433] resulting in a disconnect between the Canadian populace and their monarch.[430] Former Governor General Roland Michener said in 1970 that anti-monarchists claimed the Canadian Crown is foreign and incompatible with Canada's multicultural society,[286] which the government promoted as a Canadian identifier, and Lawrence Martin called in 2007 for Canada to become a republic in order to "re-brand the nation".[434] However, Michener also stated, "[the monarchy] is our own by inheritance and choice, and contributes much to our distinctive Canadian identity and our chances of independent survival amongst the republics of North and South America."[286] Journalist Christina Blizzard emphasized in 2009 that the monarchy "made [Canada] a haven of peace and justice for immigrants from around the world",[435] while Michael Valpy contended in 2009 that the Crown's nature permitted non-conformity amongst its subjects, thereby opening the door to multiculturalism and pluralism.[46] Johnston described the Crown as providing "space for our values and beliefs as Canadians."[180]

In media and popular culture edit

Painting and sculpture edit

Aside from official artworks, such as monuments and portraits commissioned by government bodies, Canadian painters have, by their own volition or for private organizations, created more expressive, informal depictions of Canada's monarchs and other members of the royal family, ranging from fine art to irreverent graffiti. For example, the English-Canadian artist Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith produced The Artist Painting Queen Victoria in 1895, which now resides at the National Gallery of Canada. At Library and Archives Canada is the painting The Unveiling of the National War Memorial, capturing the dedication of the monument, in Ottawa, by King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1939; though, the artist is unknown.[436]

 
 
 
 
 
 
(Clockwise from top) portrait of Elizabeth II by Lorena Ziraldo, 2014; wax figure of Elizabeth II at the Royal London Wax Museum, Victoria; Frederic Marlett Bell-Smith's The Artist Painting Queen Victoria, 1895; pop art portrait of Victoria, Toronto; The Unveiling of the National War Memorial, 1939; irreverent graffiti in Montreal depicting Elizabeth II

Hilton Hassell depicted Princess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth II) square dancing at Rideau Hall in 1951 and a portrait of Elizabeth II by Lorena Ziraldo, of Ottawa, was featured in the Hill Times and Ottawa Citizen.

Charles Pachter, from Toronto, fashioned the painting Noblesse Oblige in 1972, which shows Queen Elizabeth II, in her Guards Regiment uniform and saluting, as she did during Trooping the Colour ceremonies, except atop a moose instead of her horse, Burmese. Despite great controversy when it was first exhibited,[437] it "has become a Canadian cultural image; the people's image".[437][438] Pachter, subsequently made numerous variations on the theme,[439] including Queen & Moose (1973)[440] and The Queen on a Moose (1988).[441] The artist said, "there was an amazing symmetry of putting the sovereign of her northern realm (Canada) on an animal who is the 'monarch of the north, awkward but majestic'".[437] Pachter made similar pieces showing Elizabeth's son, Prince Charles (now King Charles III) and his wife, Camilla, standing alongside a moose[438] and Charles's son, Prince William, and his wife, Catherine, with Canadian wildlife, such as a moose and a squirrel.[442] For Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee, Pachter created a series of fake postage stamps using all his paintings that include members of the royal family,[437] which he called "my branded images for Canada."[443] Some were featured on accessory items sold at the Hudson's Bay Company.[443]

Portraits of Elizabeth II hung in several hockey arenas across Canada after her accession in 1952. One was in place in Maple Leaf Gardens until the early 1970s, when owner Harold Ballard had it removed to construct more seating, stating, "if people want to see pictures of the Queen, they can go to an art gallery."[444] Three large portraits of Elizabeth II were created for Winnipeg Arena, on display there from the building's opening in 1955 to 1999.[448]

At the time of the sesquicentennial of Confederation in 2017, Vancouver Island-based[449] artist Timothy Hoey created a "Canada 150" version of his decade-long "O Canada" project, painting 150 Canadian icons in acrylic paint on 20.3 by 25.4 centimetre (eight by 10 inch) boards.[450][451] Among them are numerous depictions of Queen Elizabeth II with other Canadian icons, such as beavers, Cheezies, the Grey Cup,[450] the Stanley Cup,[451] a bottle of beer (O Canada Liz Enjoying Some Wobbly-Pops),[452] Rush (O Canada Closer to the Heart), the Hudson's Bay point blanket,[452] the Trans-Canada Highway, a birch canoe, a buckskin jacket, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police uniform, a Montreal Canadiens hockey sweater, and so on.[450] Hoey had previously painted Elizabeth, in formal attire and tiara, holding a hockey stick in front of a Hudson's Bay point blanket; the work titled O-Canada Liz.[453] In 2021, he depicted the Queen in a decorative hat, uniform of the Vancouver Canucks from the 1978–1979 season, and full goaltender equipment.[454]

The also exist wax sculptures of Queen Elizabeth II in private museums, such as the Royal London Wax Museum in Victoria, British Columbia, and the Wax Museum of History in Niagara Falls, Ontario.[455]

Television edit

The television series Rideau Hall, starring Bette MacDonald, was produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and aired for one season in 2002. Its premise was a brash, one-hit wonder disco artist being appointed governor general on the advice of a republican prime minister.[456][457]

External videos
  Scott Thompson as The Queen Source: Broadway Video.

Canadian comedian Scott Thompson regularly played a parody of Queen Elizabeth II in a Canadian context on the sketch comedy television show The Kids in the Hall,[458] as well as in other productions, such as The Queen's Toast: A Royal Wedding Special[459] and Conan. Thompson also voiced a portrayal of Queen Elizabeth II in Canada in the animated television show Fugget About It, in the episode "Royally Screwed".[460]

The Canadian monarchy was parodied in "Royal Pudding", the third episode of the 15th season of the animated television show South Park, which first aired on 11 May 2011.[461] The opening focuses on a spoof of the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton,[462][463] featuring caricatures of Queen Elizabeth II; Prince William, Prince of Wales; and Catherine, Princess of Wales. Specific mention is made of "the Queen of Canada" and "the Canadian royal family".[464] The show subsequently, in the second episode of the 26th season, "The Worldwide Privacy Tour", parodied the Duke and Duchess of Sussex as a prince of Canada and "the wife", who, after hostile treatment at the funeral of the late Queen of Canada, go on national television and a world tour demanding people and the media not pay attention to them and branding themselves as victims.[465]

Royal family and house edit

 
Members of the royal family standing in convertibles during the opening of 1978 Commonwealth Games in Edmonton; Elizabeth II (front, left), Prince Philip (front, right), Prince Andrew (rear, left), and Prince Edward (rear, right)

The Canadian royal family is the group of people who are comparatively closely related to the country's monarch and,[466] as such, belong to the House of Windsor and owe their allegiance specifically to the reigning king or queen of Canada.[467] There is no legal definition of who is or is not a member of the royal family; though, the Government of Canada's website lists "working members of the royal family".[468]

Unlike in the United Kingdom, the monarch is the only member of the royal family with a title established through Canadian law and is styled by convention as his/her majesty,[469] as would be a queen consort. Otherwise, the remaining family members are, as a courtesy, styled and titled as they are in the UK,[469] according to letters patent issued there,[470][471] but, with French translations.[472]

Those in the royal family are distant relations of the Belgian, Danish, Greek, Norwegian, Spanish, and Swedish royal families and,[473] given the shared nature of the Canadian monarch, are also members of the British royal family. However, because Canada and the UK are independent of one another, it is inappropriate to refer in the Canadian context to the family of the monarch as the "British royal family"[474]—as is frequently done by Canadian and other media.[475][476] Further, in addition to the five Canadian citizens in the royal family,[n 22] the sovereign is considered Canadian,[484] and those among his relations who do not meet the requirements of Canadian citizenship law are considered Canadian, which entitles them to Canadian consular assistance and the protection of the King's armed forces of Canada when they are in need of protection or aid outside of the Commonwealth realms,[467] as well as, since 2013, substantive appointment to the Order of Canada and Order of Military Merit.[485][486][487] Beyond formalities, members of the royal family have, on occasion, been said by the media and non-governmental organizations to be Canadian,[n 23] have declared themselves to be Canadian,[n 24] and some past members have lived in Canada for extended periods as viceroy or for other reasons.[n 25]

 
King Edward VIII unveiling the figure Canada Bereft on the Canadian National Vimy Memorial in July 1936

According to the Canadian Royal Heritage Trust, Prince Edward Augustus, Duke of Kent and Strathearn—due to his having lived in Canada between 1791 and 1800 and fathering Queen Victoria—is the "ancestor of the modern Canadian royal family".[499] Nonetheless, the concept of the Canadian royal family did not emerge until after the passage of the Statute of Westminster in 1931, when Canadian officials only began to overtly consider putting the principles of Canada's new status as an independent kingdom into effect.[502] Initially, the monarch was the only member of the royal family to carry out public ceremonial duties solely on the advice of Canadian ministers; King Edward VIII became the first to do so when in July 1936 he dedicated the Canadian National Vimy Memorial in France.[n 18] Over the decades, however, the monarch's children, grandchildren, cousins, and their respective spouses began to also perform functions at the direction of the Canadian Crown-in-Council, representing the monarch within Canada or abroad, in a role specifically as members of the Canadian royal family.[503]

However, it was not until October 2002 when the term Canadian royal family was first used publicly and officially by one of its members: in a speech to the Nunavut legislature at its opening, Queen Elizabeth II stated: "I am proud to be the first member of the Canadian royal family to be greeted in Canada's newest territory."[504][505] Princess Anne used it again when speaking at Rideau Hall in 2014,[506] as did the now King Charles in Halifax the same year.[507] Also in 2014, then-Premier of Saskatchewan Brad Wall called Prince Edward a member of the Canadian royal family.[508] By 2011, both Canadian and British media were referring to "Canada's royal family" or the "Canadian royal family".[513]

While Heard observed in the 2018 that no direct legal action has, so far, created a Canadian royal family,[514] he also asserted that the Canadian Heraldic Authority creating uniquely Canadian standards for members of the royal family other than the monarch was a symbolic "localization of the royal family";[515] Sean Palmer agreed, stating the banners are a sign the country has taken "'ownership' not only of the Queen of Canada, but of the other members of her family as well" and that doing so was another formal affirmation of the concept of a Canadian royal family "as distinct as the Queen of Canada is from the Queen of the United Kingdom".[505] Jai Patel and Sally Raudon also noted, in 2019, that the purpose of these heraldic banners was to recognize the owners' roles as members of the Canadian royal family.[516]

Federal residences and royal household edit

Official residences of the sovereign and their representative, the governor general

A number of buildings across Canada are reserved by the Crown for the use of the monarch and his viceroys. Each is called Government House, but may be customarily known by some specific name. The sovereign's and governor general's official residences are Rideau Hall in Ottawa and the Citadelle in Quebec City.[n 26][529] Each of these royal seats holds pieces from the Crown Collection.[530] Further, though neither was ever used for their intended purpose, Hatley Castle in British Columbia was purchased in 1940 by King George VI in Right of Canada to use as his home during the course of the Second World War[531] and the Emergency Government Headquarters, built in 1959 at CFS Carp and decommissioned in 1994, included a residential apartment for the sovereign or governor general in the case of a nuclear attack on Ottawa.[532][533]

Monarchs and members of their family have also owned in a private capacity homes and land in Canada: King Edward VIII owned Bedingfield Ranch, near Pekisko, Alberta;[534] John Campbell, Marquess of Lorne, and Princess Louise owned a cottage on the Cascapédia River in Quebec;[535] and Princess Margaret owned Portland Island between its gifting to her by the Crown in Right of British Columbia in 1958 and her death in 2002, though she offered it back to the Crown on permanent loan in 1966 and the island and surrounding waters eventually became Princess Margaret Marine Park.[536][537]

 
Prince Arthur at Mohawk Chapel in 1913. The sanctuary was designated a chapel royal in 1904.

In addition to a maître d’hôtel, chefs, footmen, valets, dressers, pages, aides-de-camp (drawn from the junior officers of the armed forces), equerries, and others at Rideau Hall,[538] the King appoints various people to his Canadian household to assist him in carrying out his official duties on behalf of Canada. Along with the Canadian secretary to the King,[411] the monarch's entourage includes the equerry-in-waiting to the King, the King's police officer, two ladies-in-waiting for the Queen,[539] the King's honorary physician, the King's honorary dental surgeon, and the King's honorary nursing officer[540]—the latter three being drawn from the Canadian Forces.[143] Prince Edward, Duke of Edinburgh, also has a Canadian private secretary and his wife,[541] Sophie, Duchess of Edinburgh, a lady-in-waiting.[542] Air transportation for the royal family is provided by the Royal Canadian Air Force 412 Transport Squadron.

There are three household regiments specifically attached to the royal household—the Governor General's Foot Guards, the Governor General's Horse Guards, and the Canadian Grenadier Guards. There are also three chapels royal, all in Ontario:[543] Mohawk Chapel in Brantford; Christ Church Royal Chapel, near Deseronto; and St Catherine's Chapel in Massey College, in Toronto. Though not officially a royal chapel, St Bartholomew's Anglican Church, located across MacKay Street from Rideau Hall, is regularly used by governors general and their families and sometimes by the sovereign and other members of the royal family, as well as by viceregal household staff, their families, and members of the Governor General's Foot Guards, for whom the church also serves as a regimental chapel.[544]

Security edit

 
A Queen's Police Officer, drawn from the RCMP, with Elizabeth II in Toronto
 
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge with an RCMP escort, in Charlottetown

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police is tasked with providing security to the sovereign, the governor general (starting from when he or she is made governor general-designate[545]), and other members of the royal family; as outlined in the RCMP Regulations, the force "has a duty to protect individuals designated by the minister of public safety, including certain members of the royal family when visiting."[546] The RCMP's provision of service is determined based on threat and risk assessment, the seniority of the individual in terms of precedence and.[n 27] for members of the royal family, the nature of the royal tour—i.e. an official tour by the King or on behalf of the King or a working or private visit.[546] The governor general receives round-the-clock security from the Governor General Protection Detail,[548] part of the Personal Protection Group, based at Rideau Hall.

History edit

From colonies to independence edit

 
King Francis I of France established colonies in Acadia and Canada in 1534.
 
Queen Victoria in 1870, three years after her royal assent to the British North America Act, 1867, creating the Canadian federation

The Canadian monarchy can trace its ancestral lineage back to the kings of the Angles and the early Scottish kings and through the centuries since the claims of King Henry VII in 1497 and King Francis I in 1534; both being blood relatives of the current Canadian monarch. Former Prime Minister Stephen Harper said of the Crown that it "links us all together with the majestic past that takes us back to the Tudors, the Plantagenets, Magna Carta, habeas corpus, petition of rights, and English common law."[549] Though the first French and British colonizers of Canada interpreted the hereditary nature of some indigenous North American chieftainships as a form of monarchy,[553] it is generally accepted that Canada has been a territory of a monarch or a monarchy in its own right only since the establishment of the French colony of Canada in the early 16th century;[47] according to historian Jacques Monet, the Canadian Crown is one of the few that have survived through uninterrupted succession since before its inception.[58]

After the Canadian colonies of France were, via war and treaties, ceded to the British Crown, and the population was greatly expanded by those loyal to George III fleeing north from persecution during and following the American Revolution, British North America was in 1867 confederated by Queen Victoria to form Canada as a kingdom in its own right.[555] By the end of the First World War, the increased fortitude of Canadian nationalism inspired the country's leaders to push for greater independence from the King in his British Council, resulting in the creation of the uniquely Canadian monarchy through the Statute of Westminster, which was granted royal assent in 1931.[556][557] Only five years later, Canada had three successive kings in the space of one year, with the death of George V, the accession and abdication of Edward VIII, and his replacement by George VI.

From 1786 through to the 1930s, members of the royal family toured Canada, including Prince William (later King William IV); Prince Edward, Duke of Kent; Prince Albert Edward, Prince of Wales (later King Edward VII); Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn; John Campbell, Marquess of Lorne, and Princess Louise; Prince Leopold; Princess Marie-Louise; Prince George, Duke of Cornwall and York (later King George V), and Princess Victoria (later Queen Mary); Prince Arthur (son of the Duke of Connaught); Princess Patricia; Prince Albert (later King George VI); Prince Edward, Prince of Wales (later King Edward VIII); Prince George, Duke of Kent; and Prince Henry, Duke of Gloucester.[558]

The Canadian Crown edit

 
King George VI and Queen Elizabeth attending the King's Plate in Toronto during their 1939 royal tour

King George VI became in 1939 the first reigning monarch of Canada to tour the country, doing so with his wife, Queen Elizabeth. Only weeks later, the King, on the advice of his Canadian Prime Minister, declared war on Nazi Germany.[559] Throughout the conflict, George boosted the morale of his Canadian troops[560] while Governor General the Earl of Athlone (the King's uncle) supported the war effort in Canada. The men were occasionally assisted in their efforts by other members of the royal family.

 
Queen Elizabeth II, wearing her coronation gown, with Prince Philip during the opening of the 23rd Canadian Parliament, October 1957

Elizabeth II undertook her first tour of Canada in 1951, when Princess Elizabeth, Duchess of Edinburgh. She would go on to officiate at various moments of importance in the nation's history: She opened Parliament in 1957[561]—on the same tour, delivering, from Rideau Hall, her first-ever live television broadcast[562]—and in 1977; opened the St. Lawrence Seaway in 1959;[381] celebrated Canada's centennial;[381] and proclaimed the country to be fully independent, via constitutional patriation, in 1982.[495] That act is said to have entrenched the monarchy in Canada,[563] due to the stringent amending formula that must be followed in order to alter the monarchy in any way.[186]

Through the 1960s and 1970s, the rise of Quebec nationalism and changes in Canadian identity created an atmosphere where the purpose and role of the monarchy came into question. Some references to the monarch and the monarchy were removed from the public eye and moves were made by the federal government to constitutionally alter the Crown's place and role in Canada, first by explicit legal amendments and later by subtle attrition.[566] But, provincial and federal ministers, along with loyal national citizen's organizations, ensured that the system remained the same in essence.[567]

The Queen publicly expressed her personal support for the Meech Lake Accord, which attempted to bring Quebec governmental support to the patriated constitution.[568] The accord failed, prompting Elizabeth to deliver a nationally-broadcast speech in Ottawa supporting Canadian unity.[569] In the lead-up to the referendum on Quebec independence in 1995, the Queen was tricked by a Montreal radio DJ into revealing her desire to see the "no" side win, offering to help however she could.[570][571] Elizabeth followed the results closely on the day of the vote.[571]

Members of the royal family continued to be present at important national events through the decades: the Queen in 1970, 1971, and 1973, respectively, marked the anniversaries of Manitoba, British Columbia, and Prince Edward Island becoming Canadian provinces; celebrated Ontario's and New Brunswick's bicentennials in 1984 and the 125th anniversary of Confederation in 1992; and she opened the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal[381] and Nunavut's parliament in 1999. Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, attended the 100th anniversary of Treaty 7 in 1977; commemorated in 1983 the bicentennial of United Empire Loyalists settling in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia; and, with Diana, Princess of Wales, opened Expo 86 in Vancouver. Between them, the Queen and her family opened numerous Commonwealth Games, Commonwealth Heads of Government Meetings, conferences, hospitals, community centres, and the like; handed out The Duke of Edinburgh Awards at ceremonies across the country, and visited many regiments and branches of the Canadian Armed Forces.[572]

The 21st century edit

 
Elizabeth II, the first monarch to be titled Queen of Canada, wearing her Canadian insignia, as sovereign of the Order of Canada and the Order of Military Merit, 2010

By 2002, the royal tour and associated fêtes for the Queen's Golden Jubilee proved popular with Canadians across the country,[573][574][575] though Canada's first republican organization since the 1830s was also founded that year. Celebrations took place across the country to mark the Queen's Diamond Jubilee in 2012,[576][577] the first such event in Canada since that for Victoria in 1897. On 9 September 2015, she became the second-longest reigning monarch in Canadian history (preceded only by King Louis XIV);[578] events were organized to celebrate her as the "longest-reigning sovereign in Canada's modern era."[579] Prince Charles represented his mother, the Queen, two years later, at the main events in Ottawa recognizing the 150th anniversary of Confederation.[580]

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the Queen expressed her support for all Canadians and thanks to those who were caring for the vulnerable and providing essential services.[581] As the pandemic waned into 2022, celebrations were mounted around the country and throughout the year to mark the Queen's Platinum Jubilee;[582] the first-ever such event in Canadian history.[583] It was also, though, the first time since at least Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee in 1887 that the federal Cabinet did not advise the Crown to create an associated medal.[584] In response, six provinces produced their own Platinum Jubilee medals; another first.[585]

The subject of reconciliation with Canada's indigenous peoples came to the forefront of the public consciousness in 2021, particularly in regard to residential schools. Statues of Queen Victoria and Queen Elizabeth II in Winnipeg were vandalized.[586][587] On the first National Day for Truth and Reconciliation, Elizabeth made a public statement, saying she "joins with all Canadians [...] to reflect on the painful history that indigenous peoples endured in residential schools in Canada and on the work that remains to heal and to continue to build an inclusive society."[588] In the same year, the Queen appointed Mary Simon as the first indigenous governor general in Canadian history.[n 28][589] During Charles's tour for his mother's Platinum Jubilee, the BBC's royal correspondent observed that "there [was] no shying away from acknowledging and highlighting the scandalous way many indigenous peoples have been treated in Canada."[351]

Reign of Charles III edit

 
King Charles III meets Governor General Mary Simon, 5 May 2023

Queen Elizabeth II died on 8 September 2022 and was succeeded by her eldest son, who took the regnal name Charles III. The Queen's final public statement was sent on 7 September, in the aftermath of the 2022 Saskatchewan stabbings,[590][591] stating she "mourn[s] with all Canadians at this tragic time."[592] Elizabeth reigned for almost half of Canada's history since Confederation,[593] being only the sixth Canadian monarch since 1867.[594]

Immediately following a formal meeting of the King's Privy Council for Canada, the new king was proclaimed on 10 September in a ceremony at Rideau Hall.[595][596] On 4 May 2023, the King held audience with Simon and indigenous leaders, who also attended his coronation two days later.[597]

Public perception and understanding edit

Prior to the 1970s, Canadians' view of the monarchy was more focused on the person of the monarch than the institution's place in the country's framework.[515] Monet and Frank MacKinnon discerned in that decade that the Crown, as a legal and constitutional entity, had, instead, became the cynosure.[598][599] Smith, in 2017, and Jackson, in 2018, observed the shift continuing, especially as "the process of 'Canadianization' of the Crown picked up momentum in the early 21st century."[600][601]

Still, beginning in the later decades of the 20th century, commentators stated that contemporary Canadians had and have a poor understanding of the Canadian monarchy;[602] something the Monarchist League of Canada (MLC) claims opponents of the monarchy exacerbate by spreading disinformation and then take advantage of.[603] Jackson wrote in his book, The Crown and Canadian Federalism, that this is part of a wider ignorance about Canadian civics[604] and Hugo Cyr agreed,[605] while Smith researched for his 1995 book, The Invisible Crown, he found it difficult to "find anyone who could talk knowledgeably about the subject".[606] Former Governors General Clarkson and Johnston made similar observations[180][607] and Senator Lowell Murray wrote in 2003, "the Crown has become irrelevant to most Canadians' understanding of our system of government", which he attributed to the "fault of successive generations of politicians, of an educational system that has never given the institution due study, and of past viceregal incumbents themselves".[608]

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Examples of the prevalence of royal references and images around Canada (clockwise from top): nickel with the effigy of Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse; Patricia Lake, named for Princess Patricia of Connaught; badge of the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary; Ontario vehicle licence plate showing the silhouette of a crown; burgee of the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club; Prince Edward Island, named for Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn; Queen station beneath Toronto's Queen Street, so named for Queen Victoria

On education, teacher and author Nathan Tidridge asserted that, beginning in the 1960s, the role of the Crown disappeared from provincial education curricula, as the general subject of civics came to receive less attention.[565] He said Canadians are being "educated to be illiterate, ambivalent, or even hostile toward our constitutional monarchy".[604] The MLC agreed, stating Canada has "an educational system which unfortunately often fails to provide comprehensive knowledge of Canada's constitution."[603]

Michael Valpy also pointed to the fact that "the Crown's role in the machinery of Canada's constitutional monarchy rarely sees daylight. Only a handful of times in our history has it been subjected to glaring sunshine, unfortunately resulting in a black hole of public understanding as to how it works."[609] He later iterated, "the public's attention span on the constitutional intricacies of the monarchy is clinically short".[610] At the same time, it has been theorized the monarchy is so prevalent in Canada—by way of all manner of symbols, place names, royal tours, etcetera—that Canadians fail to take note of it; the monarchy "functions like a tasteful wallpaper pattern in Canada: enjoyable in an absent-minded way, but so ubiquitous as to be almost invisible".[483]

John Pepall argued in 1990 that, among all this, a "Liberal-inspired republican misconception of the role" of governor general had taken root, though the Conservative government headed by Brian Mulroney exacerbated the matter.[611] The position of prime minister has simultaneously undergone, with encouragement from its occupants,[611] what has been described as a "presidentialization",[612][613] to the point that its incumbents publicly outshine the actual head of state.[614][615] David S. Donovan felt Canadians mostly consider the monarch and her representatives as purely ceremonial and symbolic figures,[616] while also still viewing the sovereign as British, even if they understand he is King of Canada.[514] It was argued by Alfred Neitsch that this undermined the Crown's legitimacy as a check and balance in the governmental system,[617] a situation Helen Forsey (daughter of Canadian constitutional expert Eugene Forsey) said prime ministers take advantage of, portraying themselves as the embodiment of popular democracy and the reserve powers of the Crown as illegitimate.[n 29] The issue is particularly acute in Quebec,[294] where sovereigntist politicians consider the Canadian monarchy as British, foreign, and, consequently, as symbol of oppression.[618]

Beginning slightly earlier, a "growing interest in the Crown and its prerogatives" was observed, as evidenced by "a burst of articles, books and conferences";[606] the monarchy attracted increased attention from academics, as well as those involved with the law, government, and public policy.[619] This was attributed to the coincidental occurrence of publicly prominent events over a number of years, including the 2008 prorogation dispute; an increased use of royal symbols as directed by the Cabinet while headed by Stephen Harper, including three consecutive royal tours;[620] court cases focusing on the Oath of Citizenship; and increasingly active governors. Smith and Lagassé noted in early 2016 that post-secondary students were giving more focus to the subject of the Crown.[606]

 
The statue of Queen Victoria at the Manitoba Legislative Building that was destroyed by protesters on Canada Day, 2021

The relationship between Canada's Indigenous peoples and the monarch remains unchanged, aside from the issue of reconciliation arising in it through the late 2010s into the 2020s,[601] when there were some assertions by activists and in the media that the monarchy and the Queen herself represented colonialism[625] and racism[626] and she did not do enough to either prevent or rectify supposed offences.[623] Those who made such claims also, though, mistook the independent Canadian Crown[627] as the British Crown in Canada and demonstrated a misunderstanding of the Crown-indigenous peoples relationship[628][629] and the workings of constitutional monarchy and responsible government,[630] in which the sovereign must, outside of constitutional crises, follow the directions of his or her ministers and parliamentarians.[634] The leader of the Parti Québécois, Paul St-Pierre Plamondon, claimed in 2022, "we cannot overlook that she [Queen Elizabeth II] represented an institution, the British Crown, that has caused significant harm to Quebecers and Indigenous nations."[618]

Within Quebec, too, the Canadian Crown is frequently misrepresented as the British Crown and that false foreignness used in political, particularly sovereigntist, discourse as an argument in favour of extracting the Crown from Quebec or Quebec from Canada. For instance, in the televised Radio-Canada leaders' debate on 22 September 2022, during that year's general election in the province, the moderator, Patrice Roy, asked the panel, with "incredulous chuckles", "should we still, in Quebec, swear allegiance to the British Crown, thus Charles III [to take one's seat in the National Assembly]?"[635] Bloc Québécois leader Yves-François Blanchet on 26 October 2022 tabled a motion in the House of Commons proposing that the "House express its desire to sever ties between the Canadian state and the British monarchy."[636] This motion was defeated 266 to 44.[636]

Debate edit

Outside of academic circles, there has been little national debate on the monarchy.[637] The position of monarch in Canada is highly protected by the Constitution Act, 1982—which mandates that any major constitutional amendment, such as any change to the monarchy, must receive unanimous consent of the Senate, the House of Commons, and all 10 provincial legislative assemblies—and treaties between the Crown and indigenous peoples that play a role in entrenching the monarchy.[n 30]

 
Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex, speaks with members of the Monarchist League of Canada at a League reception held at the Spoke Club in Toronto

Canada has two special-interest groups representing the debate, who occasionally argue the issue in the media: the Monarchist League of Canada (MLC) and Citizens for a Canadian Republic.[639][640] There are also other organizations that support and advocate the monarchy, such as the Institute for the Study of the Crown in Canada,[641] the Canadian Royal Heritage Trust,[642] the Friends of the Canadian Crown,[643] Canadian Friends of the Royal Family,[644] the Société de la Couronne du Canada,[645] the Orange Order in Canada,[646] and the United Empire Loyalists' Association of Canada.[647]

Out of Canada's four most prominent political parties, neither the Liberal Party nor the Conservative Party are officially in favour of abolishing the monarchy (the Conservative Party cite support for constitutional monarchy as a founding principle in its policy declaration)[648] and the New Democratic Party has no official position on the role of the Crown. Only some members of Parliament belonging to these parties and the leaders of the Bloc Québécois have made any statements suggesting abolition of the monarchy.[649][650]

Opinion polls on the Canadian monarchy have been regularly conducted since the 1990s. An analysis of these polls in 2008 highlighted an increased disaffection with the monarchy, albeit with internal contradictions in specific polling results, with some criticizing the polling questions for using "inconsistent and sometimes ambiguous wording."[651] Questions often describe the monarch or monarchy as "British", terminology at odds with the contemporary situation in Canada, wherein the monarchy is a Canadian institution,[653] separate from that of the United Kingdom,[654] and it, the Crown, and royal family are referred to as Canadian.[660] Both monarchists and republicans agree the populace's general lack of understanding about the monarchy affects opinions.[603][661]

The idea of a uniquely Canadian monarch,[662] either one descended from the House of Windsor or coming from a First Nations royal house,[666] has been proffered as an alternative. However, there has been no popular or official support for such a change.

See also edit

Monarchy by provinces

Notes edit

  1. ^ The date of the first establishment of monarchy in Canada varies: some sources give the year as 1497, when John Cabot landed somewhere along the North American coast (most likely Nova Scotia or Newfoundland) claiming an undefined extent of land for King Henry VII,[42] while others put it at 1534, when the colony of Canada was founded in the name of King Francis I.[49] Historian Carolyn Harris places the beginning of Canada's monarchical government at the appointment of Samuel de Champlain as Governor of New France, representing King Louis XIII, in 1627.[50] Although the exact date differs, the fact that a monarchical form of governance has existed since the 16th century is in common agreement.[56]
  2. ^ The term was first coined by Governor General the Lord Grey in 1905, when he stated in a telegram to King Edward VII regarding the inauguration of Alberta and Saskatchewan into Confederation: "[each one] a new leaf in Your Majesty's Maple Crown".[67]
  3. ^ a b On a number of occasions, the sovereign has carried out foreign relations as the representative uniquely of Canada, such as the visits to the United States by King George VI in 1939 and Queen Elizabeth II in 1957.
  4. ^ The English Court of Appeal ruled in 1982, while "there is only one person who is the Sovereign within the British Commonwealth [...] in matters of law and government the Queen of the United Kingdom, for example, is entirely independent and distinct from the Queen of Canada."[74]
  5. ^ In 1997, then Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Tony Blair intended to offer a life peerage to Canadian businessman Conrad Black. However, citing the 1919 Nickle Resolution, the Canadian Cabinet advised the Queen not to grant Black such an honour. If Blair had not yielded, the Queen would have been in the situation of having to grant an honour on the advice of her British Prime Minister and to object to the same as Queen of Canada on the advice of then-Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chrétien.
  6. ^ For example, Edward VIII was never crowned, yet was undoubtedly king during his short time on the throne.
  7. ^ The only Canadian monarch to abdicate, Edward VIII, did so with the authorization of the Canadian government granted in His Majesty's Declaration of Abdication Act, 1936, and the Succession to the Throne Act, 1937, later confirmed this in law.
  8. ^ Gary Toffoli of the Canadian Royal Heritage Trust stated that the approval given by the Queen in her Canadian Council in 1981 to the marriage of Charles, Prince of Wales, and Lady Diana Spencer[120] separately to the same approval given by the Queen in her British Council illustrated the existence of the Royal Marriages Act in Canadian law.[121] In 1947, the King in his Canadian Council gave the same consent to the marriage of Princess Elizabeth to Philip Mountbatten, again separate from the approval he gave in his British Council.[120]
  9. ^ Upon acceding to the throne on 8 September 2022, King Charles III stated, "I am deeply aware of this great inheritance and of the duties and heavy responsibilities of sovereignty, which have now passed to me. In taking up these responsibilities, I shall strive to follow the inspiring example I have been set in upholding constitutional government and to seek the peace, harmony, and prosperity of [...] the Commonwealth realms and territories throughout the world."[176]
  10. ^ For example, if a lawsuit is filed against the federal government, the respondent is formally described as His Majesty the King in Right of Canada, or simply Rex.[143] Likewise, in a case in which a party sues both the province of Saskatchewan and the federal government, the respondents would be formally called His Majesty the King in Right of Saskatchewan and His Majesty the King in Right of Canada.[184]
  11. ^ Illustrative of this arrangement is property transfers; of this, the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources states: "When public land is required by the federal government or one of its departments, or any provincial ministry, the land itself is not transferred. What is transferred is the responsibility to manage the lands on behalf of Her Majesty the Queen (HMQ). This is accomplished by an order-in-council or a minister's order, which transfers management of land either from HMQ in right of Ontario to HMQ in right of Canada as represented by a department or to HMQ in right of Ontario as represented by another ministry. The Crown does not transfer ownership to itself."[185]
  12. ^ Robert E. Hawkins called this "inefficient efficiency", which can "be placed alongside the other oxymorons that convention embeds in our constitution, oxymorons like loyal opposition, liberal democracy, and constitutional monarchy itself."[190]
  13. ^ The sovereign has been described by Eugene Forsey as the "symbolic embodiment of the people—not a particular group or interest or party, but the people, the whole people";[89] his daughter, Helen Forsey, said of his opinion on the Crown, "for him, the essence of the monarchy was its impartial representation of the common interests of the citizenry as a whole, as opposed to those of any particular government."[89] The Department of Canadian Heritage said the Crown serves as the "personal symbol of allegiance, unity and authority for all Canadians,"[75][209] a concept akin to that expressed by King Louis XIV: "l'État, c'est moi", or, "I am the state".[210] Robertson Davies stated in 1994, "the Crown is the consecrated spirit of Canada",[211] and past Ontario chairman of the Monarchist League of Canada Gary Toffoli opined, "the Queen is the legal embodiment of the state at both the national and the provincial levels [...] She is our sovereign and it is the role of the Queen, recognized by the constitutional law of Canada, to embody the state."[212]
  14. ^ As Peter Boyce put it: "The Crown as a concept cannot be disentangled from the person of the monarch; but, standard reference to the Crown extends well beyond the Queen's person."[225]
  15. ^ The Supreme Court found in the 1980 case Attorney General of Quebec v. Labrecque that civil servants in Canada are not contracted by an abstraction called "the state"; but, rather, they are employed by the monarch, who, "enjoys a general capacity to contract in accordance with the rule of ordinary law."[229]
  16. ^ It is stated in the Rules & Forms of the House of Commons of Canada that, "allegiance to the King means allegiance to the country."[232]
  17. ^ See 'Responsibilities' and Note 1 at Cabinet of Canada.
  18. ^ a b c Though the royal family represents other countries abroad, as directed by their respective cabinets, and typically the governor general will undertake state visits and other foreign duties on behalf of the Queen of Canada,[215][386][387] members of the royal family will also take part in Canadian events overseas.[402]
  19. ^ In 1970, Queen Elizabeth II, the Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Charles, and Princess Anne undertook a tour of Northern Canada, in part to demonstrate to an unconvinced American government and the Soviet Union that Canada had certain claim to its Arctic territories, which were strategic during the Cold War.[408]
  20. ^ Former Minister of External Affairs Mitchell Sharp commented on a situation wherein Elizabeth II was in Latin America to promote British goods at the same time a Canadian ministerial trip to the same area was underway to promote Canadian products. Sharp stated: "We couldn't ask Her Majesty to perform the function she was performing for Britain on that Latin American trip because the Queen is never recognized as Queen of Canada, except when she is in Canada."[415] The Queen's participation in Canadian events overseas contradicts Sharp's statement, however.[n 3][n 18]
  21. ^ Such events include Troopings of the Colour, inspections of the troops, and anniversaries of key battles; whenever the sovereign or a member of his family is in Ottawa, they lay a wreath at the National War Memorial.
  22. ^ Two Canadian citizens married into the royal family: In 1988, Sylvana Jones (née Tomaselli in Placentia, Newfoundland) wed George Windsor, Earl of St Andrews, a great-grandson of King George V, and, on 18 May 2008, Autumn Kelly, originally from Montreal, married Queen Elizabeth II's eldest grandson, Peter Phillips.[477] The latter couple has two children, 14th and 15th in line to the throne, who each hold dual Canadian and British citizenship,[478][479] as do the three children of George Windsor, though only the youngest, Lady Amelia Windsor, is in line to the throne, currently 36th.[480] More distantly, Princes Boris and Hermann Friedrich of Leiningen, great-great-great grandsons of Queen Victoria, are also Canadian citizens.
  23. ^ As early as 1959, it was recognized that the then-reigning Queen, Eliabeth II, was "equally at home in all her realms";[488] By the 1960s, loyal societies in Canada recognized the Elizabeth's cousin, Princess Alexandra, the Honourable Lady Ogilvy, as a "Canadian princess";[489] and, at the time of the 2011 royal tour of Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge, both Michael Valpy, writing for the CBC, and The Globe and Mail referred to William as "a prince of Canada".[490][491]
  24. ^ In 1919, Prince Edward Albert (the future King Edward VIII) asserted, "I want Canada to look upon me as a Canadian, if not actually by birth, yet certainly in mind and spirit."[492] Princess Elizabeth, Duchess of Edinburgh, said in 1951 that, when in Canada, she was "amongst fellow countrymen" and,[87][493] after acceding to the throne as Queen Elizabeth II, she, when departing the United States for Canada in 1983, stated to President Ronald Reagan, "I'm going home to Canada tomorrow".[494] In 2005, Elizabeth said she agreed with the statement earlier made by her mother, Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother, that Canada felt like a "home away from home";[495] in the same year, she remarked, "I have always felt not only welcome but at home in Canada."[381] Similarly, the Queen said in 2010, in Nova Scotia, "it is very good to be home".[496]
  25. ^ Prince Edward, Duke of Kent and Strathearn, served as the Commander of British North American troops in Canada's Maritimes for nine years after 1791, mostly in Halifax;[497] his granddaughter, Princess Louise, Marchioness of Lorne, lived in Canada between 1878 and 1883 as viceregal consort;[498] and her brother, Prince Arthur, Duke of Connaught and Strathearn, resided in Canada first through 1870 as a member of the Canadian Militia, defending Canada from the Fenian Raids,[499] and then as governor general from 1911 until 1916.[500] Later, for six years beginning in 1940, Princess Alice, Countess of Athlone (a great-grandchild of the Duke of Kent), lived in Canada with her husband, the Earl of Athlone (himself a great-grandchild of King George III),[499] while he served as governor general.[501]
  26. ^ While the government houses are the King's official residences in Canada, they are almost exclusively occupied by the sovereign's representative in each of those jurisdictions that have a government house or houses.[156][517]
  27. ^ For example, when the Duke and Duchess of Sussex resided for a time on Vancouver Island, as they were planning their future as members of the royal family, the RCMP provided the couple's security. However, when the Sussexes decided to step down as senior members of the royal family, the RCMP reassessed its provision of service. In a briefing note to the then-Minister of Public Safety, Bill Blair, the force noted, "the Sussex family's stay in Canada is of a private nature and, to date, there have been no official outings wherein the Duke and Duchess are representing the Queen. There is no indication of either the Duke or Duchess participating in any official capacity for the Crown in Canada in the next two months. Should this change, however, the RCMP will assess and provide security accordingly."[547]
  28. ^ Indigenous persons had already been appointed as lieutenant governors during Elizabeth's reign.
  29. ^ See Note 2 at Government of Canada.
  30. ^ Carleton University parliamentary expert Philippe Lagassé said, "you would need to have Indigenous peoples involved and consulted properly as well, in particular, since their treaty rights are understood to flow from treaties with the Crown."[638]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Department of Canadian Heritage. . Queen's Printer for Canada. Archived from the original on 20 December 2013. Retrieved 1 August 2013.
  2. ^ Smith, David E. (June 2010). (PDF). Conference on the Crown. Ottawa: Queen's University. p. 6. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 October 2016. Retrieved 3 March 2016.
  3. ^ Smith 1995, pp. 87–90
  4. ^ MacLeod 2015, pp. 16–18
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monarchy, canada, queen, canada, redirects, here, most, recent, female, monarch, canada, elizabeth, canadian, cult, leader, declared, herself, queen, canada, romana, didulo, monarchy, canada, canada, form, government, embodied, canadian, sovereign, head, state. Queen of Canada redirects here For the most recent female monarch of Canada see Elizabeth II For the Canadian cult leader who declared herself to be the Queen of Canada see Romana Didulo The monarchy of Canada is Canada s form of government embodied by the Canadian sovereign and head of state It is one of the key components of Canadian sovereignty and sits at the core of Canada s constitutional federal structure and Westminster style parliamentary democracy 6 The monarchy is the foundation of the executive King in Council legislative King in Parliament and judicial King on the Bench branches of both federal and provincial jurisdictions 10 The current monarch is King Charles III who has reigned since 8 September 2022 17 King of CanadaRoi du CanadaFederalArms of the King of CanadaIncumbentCharles IIIsince 8 September 2022DetailsStyleHis MajestyHeir apparentWilliam Prince of Wales 1 ResidencesRideau Hall OttawaLa Citadelle Quebec CityWebsitecanada ca monarchy crownAlthough the person of the sovereign is shared with 14 other independent countries within the Commonwealth of Nations each country s monarchy is separate and legally distinct 23 As a result the current monarch is officially titled King of Canada and in this capacity he and other members of the royal family undertake public and private functions domestically and abroad as representatives of Canada However the monarch is the only member of the royal family with any constitutional role The monarch resides predominantly in the United Kingdom and while several powers are the sovereign s alone most of the royal governmental and ceremonial duties in Canada are carried out by the monarch s representative the governor general of Canada 27 In Canada s provinces the monarch in right of each is represented by a lieutenant governor As territories fall under the federal jurisdiction they each have a commissioner rather than a lieutenant governor who represents the federal Crown in Council directly All executive authority under the Constitution is vested in the sovereign so the monarch s consent is necessary for letters patent and orders in council to have legal effect As well the monarch is part of the Parliament of Canada so royal assent is required to allow for bills to become law While the power for these acts stems from the Canadian people through the constitutional conventions of democracy 28 executive authority remains vested in the Crown and is only entrusted by the sovereign to the government on behalf of the people This underlines the Crown s role in safeguarding the rights freedoms and democratic system of government of Canadians reinforcing the fact that governments are the servants of the people and not the reverse 29 30 Thus within Canada s constitutional monarchy the sovereign s direct participation in any of these areas of governance is normally limited with the sovereign typically exercising executive authority only with the advice and consent of the Cabinet of Canada and the sovereign s legislative and judicial responsibilities largely carried out through the Parliament of Canada as well as judges and justices of the peace 29 There are though cases where the sovereign or their representative would have a duty to act directly and independently under the doctrine of necessity to prevent genuinely unconstitutional acts 31 32 In these respects the sovereign and his viceroys are custodians of the Crown s reserve powers and represent the power of the people above government and political parties 33 34 Put another way the Crown functions as the guarantor of Canada s continuous and stable governance and as a nonpartisan safeguard against the abuse of power 37 Despite its pivotal constitutional functions the monarchy remains widely misunderstood by not only the Canadian public but also many politicians Canada is one of the oldest extant monarchies in the world 19 38 Established in the 16th century n 1 the monarchy has evolved through a continuous succession of initially French and later British sovereigns into the independent Canadian sovereigns of today 59 No part of Canada has been a republic or part of a republic 60 though there have been isolated calls for the country to become one The Crown however is considered to be entrenched into the governmental framework 64 The institution that is Canada s system of constitutional monarchy is sometimes colloquially referred to as the Maple Crown n 2 or Crown of Maples 68 Canada having developed a recognizably Canadian brand of monarchy 69 Though not part of the Canadian monarchy either past or present Canada has an even older tradition of hereditary chieftainship in some First Nations which has been likened to non sovereign monarchy and today exists in parallel with the Canadian Crown and individual band governments All three entities are components of the nation to nation relationship between the Crown and First Nations in upholding treaty rights and obligations developed over the centuries Contents 1 International and domestic aspects 1 1 Succession and regency 1 1 1 Demise of the Crown and accession 1 1 2 Legal aspects of succession 1 1 3 Regency 1 2 Foreign visits 2 Federal and provincial aspects 2 1 Sovereign immunity 3 Personification of the Canadian state 3 1 Head of state 3 2 Arms 4 Federal constitutional role 4 1 Executive King in Council 4 2 Parliament King in Parliament 4 3 Courts King on the Bench 4 4 The Crown and indigenous peoples 4 4 1 Hereditary chiefs 5 Cultural role 5 1 Royal presence and duties 5 2 Symbols associations and awards 5 3 Significance to Canadian identity 5 4 In media and popular culture 5 4 1 Painting and sculpture 5 4 2 Television 6 Royal family and house 7 Federal residences and royal household 7 1 Security 8 History 8 1 From colonies to independence 8 2 The Canadian Crown 8 3 The 21st century 8 3 1 Reign of Charles III 9 Public perception and understanding 10 Debate 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Sources 14 Further information 14 1 Reading 14 2 Viewing 15 External linksInternational and domestic aspects editFurther information Commonwealth realm Relationship of the realms nbsp Commonwealth realms Overseas territories of Commonwealth realms The 15 realms of which King Charles III is the reigning sovereignThe person who is the Canadian sovereign is equally shared with 14 other monarchies a grouping including Canada known informally as the Commonwealth realms in the 56 member Commonwealth of Nations The monarch resides predominantly in the oldest and most populous realm the United Kingdom viceroys the governor general of Canada in the federal sphere and a lieutenant governor in each province are the sovereign s representatives in Canada The emergence of this arrangement paralleled the fruition of Canadian nationalism following the end of the First World War and culminated in the passage of the Statute of Westminster in 1931 70 Since then the pan national Crown has had both a shared and a separate character the sovereign s role as monarch of Canada has been distinct from his or her position as monarch of any other realm n 3 73 including the United Kingdom n 4 79 Only Canadian federal ministers of the Crown may advise the sovereign on any and all matters of the Canadian state n 5 85 of which the sovereign when not in Canada is kept abreast by weekly communications with the federal viceroy 86 The monarchy thus ceased to be an exclusively British institution and in Canada became a Canadian 90 or domesticated 91 establishment though it is still often denoted as British in both legal and common language 46 for reasons historical political and of convenience nbsp A Royal Canadian Air Force Royal Flight used to transport the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge during their 2011 royal tour of Canada This division is illustrated in a number of ways The sovereign for example holds a unique Canadian title and 92 when he and other members of the royal family are acting in public specifically as representatives of Canada they use where possible Canadian symbols including the country s national flag unique royal symbols armed forces uniforms 97 and the like as well as Canadian Forces aircraft or other Canadian owned vehicles for travel 98 Once in Canadian airspace or arrived at a Canadian event taking place abroad the Canadian secretary to the King officers of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police RCMP and other Canadian officials will take over from whichever of their other realms counterparts were previously escorting the King or other member of the royal family 98 99 The sovereign similarly only draws from Canadian funds for support in the performance of his duties when in Canada or acting as King of Canada abroad Canadians do not pay any money to the King or any other member of the royal family either towards personal income or to support royal residences outside of Canada 100 101 There are five aspects to the monarchy of Canada 1 The constitutional monarchy the use of the royal prerogative in summoning and dissolving parliament granting royal assent issuing orders in council etcetera 2 The national monarchy for example delivering the Speech from the Throne and the Royal Christmas Message distributing honours decorations and medals and partaking in Remembrance Day ceremonies 3 The international monarchy the monarch being head of state of each of the 15 Commonwealth realms holding the position of head of the Commonwealth attending heads of government meetings and Commonwealth Games and so on 4 The religious monarchy the monarch having in his title the words by the grace of god the Act of Settlement 1701 requiring the sovereign to be Anglican and the monarch encouraging people to tolerate accept and understand cultures beliefs and faiths different from our own 5 The welfare and service monarchy seen in members of the royal family founding charities and supporting others fundraising for charity and giving royal patronage to civil and military organizations 102 Succession and regency edit Further information Succession to the British throne and Succession to the Throne Act 2013 nbsp Sophia Electress of Hanover from whom heirs to the throne must directly descend nbsp Prince William Prince of Wales the present heir apparent to the Canadian throne As in the other Commonwealth realms the current heir apparent to the Canadian throne is William Prince of Wales who is followed in the line of succession by his eldest child Prince George Demise of the Crown and accession edit Upon the death of the monarch there is a demise transfer of the Crown the late sovereign s heir immediately and automatically succeeds 105 hence arises the phrase the King is dead Long live the King 106 107 There has been no interregnum between the death of one king or queen and the accession of the next since at least the reign of Edward I 108 225 years before John Cabot landed on the east coast of what is today Canada No confirmation or further ceremony is necessary the federal Cabinet and civil service will though follow the Manual of Official Procedure of the Government of Canada in carrying out various formalities around the late monarch s death and the new monarch s assumption of the throne 109 It has been customary for the accession to be publicly proclaimed by the governor general in council who meet at Rideau Hall immediately upon the previous monarch s death 109 Since Edward VIII took the throne in 1936 it has been constitutionally inappropriate for Canada s accession proclamations to be approved by a British order in council 72 as the monarch has since then assumed the Canadian throne according to Canadian law At the accession of Charles III the first since the creation of the Canadian Heraldic Authority in 1989 the Chief Herald read the royal proclamation aloud If Parliament is in session the Prime Minister will announce the demise of the Crown there and move for a joint address of sympathy and loyalty to the new monarch 109 nbsp A memorial procession in Ottawa before the national commemoration ceremony for the death of Queen Elizabeth IIAn appropriate period of mourning also follows during which portraits of the recently deceased monarch are draped with black fabric and staff at government houses wear customary black armbands The Manual of Official Procedure of the Government of Canada states that the prime minister is responsible for convening Parliament tabling a resolution of loyalty and condolence from Parliament to the new monarch and arranging for the motion to be seconded by the leader of the official opposition 103 110 The prime minister will then move to adjourn Parliament 103 110 The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation keeps a regularly updated plan for a broadcast of national importance announcing the demise of a sovereign and covering the aftermath during which all regular programming and advertising is cancelled and on call commentators contribute to a 24 hour news mode 103 As the late sovereign is typically buried in the UK the federal and provincial governments will organize commemoration ceremonies involving religious services eulogies and military parades Such ceremonies may also be held for other recently deceased members of the royal family The day of the sovereign s funeral is likely to be a public holiday 103 The new monarch is crowned in the United Kingdom in a ritual which is ancient but not necessary for a sovereign to reign n 6 Under the federal Interpretation Act 109 officials who hold a federal office under the Crown are not affected by the death of the monarch nor are they required to take the Oath of Allegiance again 111 In some provinces though those holding Crown offices must swear the Oath to the new sovereign 112 All references in federal legislation to previous monarchs whether in the masculine e g his majesty or feminine e g the queen continue to mean the reigning sovereign of Canada regardless of his or her gender 113 This is because in common law the Crown never dies After an individual accedes to the throne he or she usually continues to reign until death n 7 Legal aspects of succession edit nbsp A copy of the Act of Settlement 1701The relationship between the Commonwealth realms is such that any change to the rules of succession to their respective crowns requires the unanimous consent of all the realms Succession is governed by statutes such as the Bill of Rights 1689 the Act of Settlement 1701 and the Acts of Union 1707 nbsp Prime Minister of Canada Mackenzie King left and Edward VIII right when Prince of Wales in Ottawa 1924 In 1936 Edward abdicated the Canadian throne and he and any of his descendants were removed from the line of succession by Order in Council PC 3144 and the Succession to the Throne Act 1937 King Edward VIII abdicated in 1936 and any possible future descendants of his were excluded from the line of succession 114 The British government at the time wishing for speed so as to avoid embarrassing debate in Dominion parliaments suggested that the governments of the Dominions of the British Commonwealth then Australia New Zealand the Irish Free State the Union of South Africa and Canada regard whoever was monarch of the UK to automatically be monarch of their respective Dominion As with the other Dominion governments the Canadian Cabinet headed by Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King refused to accept the idea and stressed that the laws of succession were part of Canadian law and as the Statute of Westminster 1931 disallowed the UK from legislating for Canada including in relation to succession 115 altering them required Canada s request and consent to the British legislation His Majesty s Declaration of Abdication Act 1936 becoming part of Canadian law 116 Sir Maurice Gwyer first parliamentary counsel in the UK reflected this position stating the Act of Settlement was a part of the law in each Dominion 116 Thus Order in Council P C 3144 117 was issued expressing the Cabinet s request and consent for His Majesty s Declaration of Abdication Act 1936 to become part of the laws of Canada and the Succession to the Throne Act 1937 gave parliamentary ratification to that action together bringing the Act of Settlement and Royal Marriages Act 1772 into Canadian law 118 119 The latter was deemed by the Cabinet in 1947 to be part of Canadian law n 8 120 The Department of External Affairs included all succession related laws in its list of acts within Canadian law The Supreme Court of Canada declared unanimously in the 1981 Patriation Reference that the Bill of Rights 1689 is undoubtedly in force as part of the law of Canada 122 123 Furthermore in O Donohue v Canada 2003 the Ontario Superior Court of Justice found that the Act of Settlement 1701 is part of the laws of Canada and the rules of succession are by necessity incorporated into the Constitution of Canada 124 Another ruling of the Ontario Superior Court in 2014 echoed the 2003 case stating that the Act of Settlement is an imperial statute which ultimately became part of the law of Canada 125 Upon dismissing appeal of that case the Court of Appeal of Ontario stated t he rules of succession are a part of the fabric of the constitution of Canada and incorporated into it 126 In a meeting of the Special Joint Committee on the Constitution during the process of patriating the Canadian constitution in 1981 John Munro asked then Minister of Justice Jean Chretien about the selective omissions of the Succession to the Throne Act 1937 the Demise of the Crown Act 1901 the Seals Act the Governor General s Act and the Royal Style and Titles Act 1953 from the schedule to the Constitution Act 1982 In response Chretien asserted that the schedule to the Constitution Act 1982 was not exhaustive outlining that section 52 2 of the Constitution Act 1982 says t he Constitution of Canada includes the acts and orders referred to the schedule and w hen you use the word includes it means that if ever there is another thing related to the Canadian constitution as part of it should have been there or might have been there it is covered So we do not have to renumerate sic the ones that you are mentioning 127 In the same meeting Deputy Attorney General Barry Strayer stated Clause 52 2 is not an exhaustive definition of the Constitution of Canada so that while we have certain things listed in the schedule which are clearly part of the constitution that does not mean that there are not other things which are part of the constitution The schedule is not an exhaustive list 127 nbsp annotations The throne of Canada left and throne for the royal consort right both commissioned in 1878 behind the speaker s chair in the Senate nbsp annotations The sovereign s throne left and royal consort s throne right behind the speaker s chair all made in 2017 in the temporary Senate chamberLeslie Zines claimed in the 1991 publication Constitutional Change in the Commonwealth that though the succession to Canada s throne was outlined by common law and the Act of Settlement 1701 these were not part of the Canadian constitution which does not contain rules for succession to the throne 128 Richard Toporoski writing three years later for the Monarchist League of Canada stated there is no existing provision in our law other than the Act of Settlement 1701 that provides that the king or queen of Canada shall be the same person as the king or queen of the United Kingdom If the British law were to be changed and we did not change our law the person provided for in the new law would become king or queen in at least some realms of the Commonwealth Canada would continue on with the person who would have become monarch under the previous law 129 Canada with the other Commonwealth realms committed to the 2011 Perth Agreement which proposed changes to the rules governing succession to remove male preference and removal of disqualification arising from marriage to a Roman Catholic As a result of the Perth Agreement the Canadian Parliament passed the Succession to the Throne Act 2013 which gave the country s assent to the Succession to the Crown Bill at that time proceeding in the Parliament of the United Kingdom In dismissing a challenge to the law on the basis that a change to the succession in Canada would require unanimous consent of all provinces under section 41 a of the Constitution Act 1982 Quebec Superior Court Justice Claude Bouchard ruled that Canada did not have to change its laws nor its constitution for the British royal succession rules to be amended and effective and constitutional convention committed Canada to having a line of succession symmetrical to those of other Commonwealth realms 130 131 The ruling was upheld by the Quebec Court of Appeal 132 The Supreme Court of Canada declined to hear an appeal in April 2020 133 Constitutional scholar Philippe Lagasse argues that in light of the Succession to the Throne Act 2013 and court rulings upholding that law section 41 a of the Constitution Act 1982 which requires a constitutional amendment passed with the unanimous consent of the provinces applies only to the office of the Queen but not who holds that office and that therefore ending the principle of symmetry with the United Kingdom can be done with the general amending procedure or even by Parliament alone under section 44 of the Constitution Act 1982 133 134 Ted McWhinney another constitutional scholar argued that a then future government of Canada could begin a process of phasing out the monarchy after the death of Elizabeth II quietly and without fanfare by simply failing legally to proclaim any successor to the Queen in relation to Canada This would he claimed be a way of bypassing the need for a constitutional amendment that would require unanimous consent by the federal Parliament and all the provincial legislatures 135 However Ian Holloway Dean of Law at the University of Western Ontario criticized McWhinney s proposal for its ignorance of provincial input and opined that its implementation would be contrary to the plain purpose of those who framed our system of government 136 Certain aspects of the succession rules have been challenged in the courts For example under the provisions of the Bill of Rights 1689 and the Act of Settlement 1701 Catholics are barred from succeeding to the throne this prohibition has been upheld twice by Canadian courts once in 2003 and again in 2014 141 Regency edit nbsp nbsp Prince George Prince Regent left Canada s last regent serving as such from 1811 until the death of his father George III right in 1820 Canada has no laws allowing for a regency should the sovereign be a minor or debilitated 86 none have been passed by the Canadian Parliament and it was made clear by successive cabinets since 1937 that the United Kingdom s Regency Act had no applicability to Canada 86 as the Canadian Cabinet had not requested otherwise when the act was passed that year and again in 1943 and 1953 As the Letters Patent 1947 issued by King George VI permit the governor general of Canada to exercise almost all of the monarch s powers in respect of Canada the viceroy is expected to continue to act as the personal representative of the monarch and not any regent even if the monarch is a child or incapacitated 144 This has led to the question of whether the governor general has the ability to remove themselves and appoint their viceregal successor in the monarch s name While Lagasse argued that appears to be the case 134 both the Canadian Manual of Official Procedures published in 1968 and the Privy Council Office took the opposite opinion 145 146 Lagasse and Patrick Baud claimed changes could be made to regulations to allow a governor general to appoint the next governor general 147 Christopher McCreery however criticised the theory arguing it is impractical to suggest that a governor general would remove him or herself on ministerial advice 148 with the consequence that if a prolonged regency occurred it would remove one of the checks and balances in the constitution 149 The intent expressed whenever the matter of regency came up among Commonwealth realm heads of government was that the relevant parliament other than the United Kingdom s would pass a bill if the need for a regency arose and the pertinent governor general would already be empowered to grant royal assent to it 150 The governor general appointing their successor is not a power that has been utilized to date 134 Foreign visits edit See also List of state and official visits by Canada nbsp King Edward VIII in Vimy France 1936 nbsp King George VI in Washington United States 1939 nbsp Queen Elizabeth II in Chicago United States 1959 nbsp Queen Elizabeth II in Beny sur Mer France 1984 The following state and official visits to foreign countries have been made by the monarch as the sovereign of Canada Visit to Date Monarch of Canada Received by Type nbsp France 26 July 1936 King Edward VIII President Albert Lebrun Official 154 nbsp United States 7 11 June 1939 King George VI President Franklin D Roosevelt State 158 nbsp United States 17 October 1957 Queen Elizabeth II President Dwight D Eisenhower State 162 nbsp United States 26 June 1959 Official 163 164 nbsp United States 6 July 1959 Governor William Stratton State 167 nbsp France 6 June 1984 President Francois Mitterrand Official 171 nbsp France 1994 Official 164 170 nbsp France 6 June 2004 President Jacques Chirac Official 172 164 nbsp France 9 April 2007 Prime Minister Dominique de Villepin Official 173 nbsp United States 6 July 2010 Governor David Paterson Official 157 174 Federal and provincial aspects editFurther information Monarchy in the Canadian provinces nbsp The one federal and 10 provincial viceroys along with the three territorial commissioners at their annual meeting in 2016 accompanied by their respective partners and secretariesThe origins of Canada s sovereignty lie in the early 17th century during which time the monarch in England fought with parliament there over who had ultimate authority culminating in the Glorious Revolution in 1688 and the subsequent Bill of Rights 1689 which as mentioned elsewhere in this article is today part of Canadian constitutional law This brought to Canada the British notion of the supremacy of parliament of which the monarch is a part and it was carried into each of the provinces upon their establishment That however was superseded when the Charter of Rights and Freedoms within the Constitution Act 1982 introduced into Canada the American idea of the supremacy of the law 175 Still the King remains the sovereign of Canada n 9 177 Canada s monarchy was established at Confederation when its executive government and authority were declared in section 9 of the Constitution Act 1867 to continue and be vested in the monarch Placing such power along with legislative power with the tangible living Queen rather than the abstract and inanimate Crown was a deliberate choice by the framers of the constitution 178 Still the Crown is the foundation of the country 179 180 as the very centre of Canada s constitution and democracy 179 Although Canada is a federation the Canadian monarchy is unitary throughout all jurisdictions in the country 181 the sovereignty of the different administrations being passed on through the overreaching Crown itself as a part of the executive legislative and judicial operations in each of the federal and provincial spheres 182 and the headship of state being a part of all equally 181 The Crown thus links the various governments into a federal state 8 while it is simultaneously also divided into 11 legal jurisdictions or 11 crowns one federal and 10 provincial 183 with the monarch taking on a distinct legal persona in each n 10 n 11 As such the constitution instructs that any change to the position of the monarch or his or her representatives in Canada requires the consent of the Senate the House of Commons and the legislative assemblies of all the provinces 186 The Crown being shared and balanced 180 provides the bedrock upon which all of Canada s different regions and peoples can live together peacefully 187 and was said by David E Smith in 2017 to be the keystone of the constitutional architecture of Canada 188 nbsp The Royal Window in the foyer of Rideau Hall commemorating Queen Elizabeth II s Ruby Jubilee At centre is the Royal Coat of Arms of Canada surrounded by the shields of each of the sovereign s 10 provincial and then two territorial coats of arms The Crown is located beyond politics existing to give authority to and protect the constitution and system of governance 179 Power therefore rests with an institution that functions to safeguard it on behalf of all its citizens rather than any singular individual 189 The sovereign and his representatives typically act by not acting n 12 holding power but not exercising it both because they are unelected figures and to maintain their neutrality deliberately insistently and resolutely 191 in case they have to be an impartial arbiter in a constitutional crisis and ensure that normal democratic discourse can resume 194 Consequently the Crown performs two functions 195 as a unifying symbol and a protector of democratic rights and freedoms 180 tightly woven into the fabric of the Canadian constitution 195 At the same time a number of freedoms granted by the constitution to all other Canadians are denied to or limited for the monarch and the other senior members of the royal family freedom of religion freedom of expression freedom to travel freedom to choose a career freedom to marry and freedom of privacy and family life 196 While the Crown is empowered by statute and the royal prerogative it also enjoys inherent powers not granted by either 197 The Court of Appeal of British Columbia ruled in 1997 that the Crown has the capacities and powers of a natural person 198 and its actions as a natural person are as with the actions of any natural person subject to judicial review 199 Further it was determined in R v Secretary of State for Health the ex parte C that as a matter of capacity no doubt the Crown has power to do whatever a private person can do But as an organ of government it can only exercise those powers for the public benefit and for identifiably governmental purposes within limits set by the law 200 Similarly use of the royal prerogative is justiciable 201 though only when the subject matter affects the rights or legitimate expectations of an individual 202 The governor general is appointed by the monarch on the advice of his federal prime minister and the lieutenant governors are appointed by the governor general on the advice of the federal prime minister The commissioners of Canada s territories are appointed by the federal governor in council at the recommendation of the minister of Crown Indigenous relations but as the territories are not sovereign entities the commissioners are not personal representatives of the sovereign The Advisory Committee on Vice Regal Appointments which may seek input from the relevant premier and provincial or territorial community proposes candidates for appointment as governor general lieutenant governor and commissioner 203 204 Sovereign immunity edit It has been held since 1918 that the federal Crown is immune from provincial law 205 Constitutional convention has also held that the Crown in right of each province is outside the jurisdiction of the courts in other provinces This view however has been questioned 206 Lieutenant governors do not enjoy the same immunity as the sovereign in matters not relating to the powers of the viceregal office as decided in the case of former Lieutenant Governor of Quebec Lise Thibault who had been accused of misappropriating public funds 207 Personification of the Canadian state edit nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Elizabeth II Queen of Canada depicted on various Canadian stamps through the 1960s and 1970s As the living embodiment of the Crown 113 208 the sovereign is regarded as the personification of the Canadian state n 13 222 and is meant to represent all Canadians regardless of political affiliation 223 As such he along with his or her viceregal representatives must remain strictly neutral in political terms 89 The person of the reigning sovereign thus holds two distinct personas in constant coexistence an ancient theory of the King s two bodies the body natural subject to infirmity and death and the body politic which never dies 224 The Crown and the monarch are conceptually divisible but legally indivisible The office cannot exist without the office holder n 14 70 so even in private the monarch is always on duty 213 The terms the state the Crown 226 the Crown in Right of Canada His Majesty the King in Right of Canada French Sa Majeste le Roi du chef du Canada 227 and similar are all synonymous and the monarch s legal personality is sometimes referred to simply as Canada 215 228 The king or queen of Canada is thus the employer of all government officials and staff including the viceroys judges members of the Canadian Forces police officers and parliamentarians n 15 the guardian of foster children Crown wards as well as the owner of all state lands Crown land buildings and equipment Crown held property 230 state owned companies Crown corporations and the copyright for all government publications Crown copyright 231 This is all in his or her position as sovereign and not as an individual all such property is held by the Crown in perpetuity and cannot be sold by the sovereign without the proper advice and consent of his or her ministers nbsp A photo portrait of Queen Elizabeth II stands at the front of a citizenship ceremony led by Lieutenant Governor of Ontario Elizabeth Dowdeswell illustrating the sovereign as the focus of the Oath of CitizenshipThe monarch is at the apex of the Canadian order of precedence and as the embodiment of the state is also the focus of oaths of allegiance n 16 235 required of many of the aforementioned employees of the Crown as well as by new citizens as by the Oath of Citizenship Allegiance is given in reciprocation to the sovereign s Coronation Oath 236 wherein he or she promises to govern the Peoples of Canada according to their respective laws and customs 237 Head of state edit Although it has been argued that the term head of state is a republican one inapplicable in a constitutional monarchy such as Canada where the monarch is the embodiment of the state and thus cannot be head of it 213 the sovereign is regarded by official government sources 241 judges 242 constitutional scholars 215 243 and pollsters as the head of state 244 while the governor general and lieutenant governors are all only representatives of and thus equally subordinate to that figure 245 Some governors general their staff government publications 215 and constitutional scholars like Ted McWhinney and C E S Franks have 246 247 however referred to the position of governor general as that of Canada s head of state 248 249 though sometimes qualifying the assertion with de facto or effective 253 Franks has hence recommended that the governor general be named officially as the head of state 247 Still others view the role of head of state as being shared by both the sovereign and his viceroys 257 Since 1927 governors general have been received on state visits abroad as though they were heads of state 258 nbsp Then Governor General David Johnston reviews the guard of honour at Rashtrapati Bhavan during a state visit to India 24 February 2014Officials at Rideau Hall have attempted to use the Letters Patent 1947 as justification for describing the governor general as head of state However the document makes no such distinction 259 nor does it effect an abdication of the sovereign s powers in favour of the viceroy 86 as it only allows the governor general to act on the Queen s behalf 260 261 D Michael Jackson former Chief of Protocol of Saskatchewan argued that Rideau Hall had been attempting to recast the governor general as head of state since the 1970s and doing so preempted both the Queen and all of the lieutenant governors 245 This caused not only precedence wars at provincial events where the governor general usurped the lieutenant governor s proper spot as most senior official in attendance 262 263 and Governor General Adrienne Clarkson to accord herself precedence before the Queen at a national occasion 264 but also constitutional issues by unbalancing the federalist symmetry 181 265 This has been regarded as both a natural evolution and as a dishonest effort to alter the constitution without public scrutiny 259 266 In a poll conducted by Ipsos Reid following the first prorogation of the 40th parliament on 4 December 2008 it was found that 42 per cent of the sample group thought the prime minister was head of state while 33 per cent felt it was the governor general Only 24 per cent named the Queen as head of state 244 a number up from 2002 when the results of an EKOS Research Associates survey showed only 5 per cent of those polled knew the Queen was head of state 69 per cent answered that it was the prime minister 267 Arms edit Main articles Arms of Canada and Royal standards of Canada nbsp The Arms of His Majesty the King in Right of Canada nbsp The royal standard of Charles III King of Canada employing the shield of the royal arms in banner form The Arms of His Majesty the King in Right of Canada is the arms of dominion of the Canadian monarch and thus equally the official coat of arms of Canada 268 269 and a symbol of national sovereignty 270 It is closely modelled after the royal coat of arms of the United Kingdom with French and distinctive Canadian elements replacing or added to those derived from the British version which was employed in Canada before the granting of the Canadian arms in 1921 271 The arms were augmented with the annulus behind the shield bearing the motto of the Order of Canada Desiderantes meliorem patriam 272 The royal standard is the monarch s official flag which depicts the royal arms in banner form 273 It takes precedence above all other flags in Canada including the national flag and those of the other members of the royal family 44 and is typically flown from buildings vessels and vehicles in which the sovereign is present although exceptions have been made for its use when the monarch is not in attendance The royal standard is never flown at half mast because there is always a sovereign when one dies his or her successor becomes the sovereign instantly Elements of the royal arms have also been incorporated into the governor general s flag similarly the flags of the lieutenant governors employ the shields of the relevant provincial coat of arms Federal constitutional role editCanada s constitution is based on the Westminster parliamentary model wherein the role of the King is both legal and practical but not political 89 The sovereign is vested with all the powers of state collectively known as the royal prerogative 274 leading the populace to be considered subjects of the Crown 275 However as the sovereign s power stems from the people 30 276 and the monarch is a constitutional one he or she does not rule alone as in an absolute monarchy Instead the Crown is regarded as a corporation sole with the monarch being the centre of a construct in which the power of the whole is shared by multiple institutions of government 179 the executive legislative and judicial 9 acting under the sovereign s authority 215 277 which is entrusted for exercise by the politicians the elected and appointed parliamentarians and the ministers of the Crown generally drawn from among them and the judges and justices of the peace 29 The monarchy has thus been described as the underlying principle of Canada s institutional unity and the monarch as a guardian of constitutional freedoms 48 233 whose job is to ensure that the political process remains intact and is allowed to function 89 nbsp The Great Seal of Canada used during the reign of Queen Elizabeth IIThe Great Seal of Canada signifies the power and authority of the Crown flowing from the sovereign to the parliamentary government 278 and is applied to state documents such as royal proclamations and letters patent commissioning Cabinet ministers senators judges and other senior government officials 279 The lending of royal authority to Cabinet is illustrated by the great seal being entrusted by the governor general the official keeper of the seal to the minister of innovation science and economic development who is ex officio the registrar general of Canada 279 Upon a change of government the seal is temporarily returned to the governor general and then lent to the next incoming registrar general 278 The Crown is the pinnacle of the Canadian Armed Forces with the constitution placing the monarch in the position of commander in chief of the entire force though the governor general carries out the duties attached to the position and also bears the title of Commander in Chief in and over Canada 280 Executive King in Council edit nbsp The first meeting of the Queen s Privy Council for Canada before the reigning sovereign Queen Elizabeth II in the State Dining Room of Rideau Hall 14 October 1957 nbsp Elizabeth II with her Cabinet in the ballroom of Rideau Hall on Dominion Day 1 July 1967 the centennial of ConfederationThe government of Canada formally termed His Majesty s Government 281 is defined by the constitution as the King acting on the advice of his Privy Council 285 what is technically known as the King in Council 8 or sometimes the Governor in Council 113 referring to the governor general as the King s stand in though a few tasks must be specifically performed by or bills that require assent from the King 288 One of the main duties of the Crown is to ensure that a democratically elected government is always in place 256 which means appointing a prime minister to thereafter head the Cabinet 289 a committee of the Privy Council charged with advising the Crown on the exercise of the royal prerogative 284 The monarch is informed by his viceroy of the swearing in and resignation of prime ministers and other members of the ministry 289 remains fully briefed through regular communications from his Canadian ministers and holds audience with them whenever possible 238 By convention the content of these communications and meetings remains confidential so as to protect the impartiality of the monarch and his representative 89 290 The appropriateness and viability of this tradition in an age of social media has been questioned 291 292 In the construct of constitutional monarchy and responsible government the ministerial advice tendered is typically binding 293 meaning the monarch reigns but does not rule 294 the Cabinet ruling in trust for the monarch 295 This has been the case in Canada since the Treaty of Paris ended the reign of the territory s last absolute monarch King Louis XV of France However the royal prerogative belongs to the Crown and not to any of the ministers 297 and the royal and viceroyal figures may unilaterally use these powers in exceptional constitutional crisis situations an exercise of the reserve powers n 17 thereby allowing the monarch to make sure the government conducts itself in compliance with the constitution 256 he and the viceroys being guarantors of the government s constitutional as opposed to democratic legitimacy and must ensure the continuity of such 298 Use of the royal prerogative in this manner was seen when the Governor General refused his prime minister s advice to dissolve Parliament in 1926 and when in 2008 the Governor General took some hours to decide whether or not to accept her Prime Minister s advice to prorogue Parliament to avoid a vote of non confidence 299 300 The prerogative powers have also been used numerous times in the provinces 299 The royal prerogative further extends to foreign affairs including the ratification of treaties alliances international agreements and declarations of war 301 the accreditation of Canadian high commissioners and ambassadors and receipt of similar diplomats from foreign states 302 303 and the issuance of Canadian passports 304 which remain the sovereign s property 305 It also includes the creation of dynastic and national honours 306 though only the latter are established on official ministerial advice Parliament King in Parliament edit nbsp King George VI with Queen Elizabeth grants royal assent to bills in the Senate chamber 1939All laws in Canada are the monarch s and the sovereign is one of the three components of the Parliament of Canada 307 308 formally called the King in Parliament 8 but the monarch and viceroy do not participate in the legislative process save for royal consent typically expressed by a minister of the Crown 309 and royal assent which is necessary for a bill to be enacted as law Either figure or a delegate may perform this task and the constitution allows the viceroy the option of deferring assent to the sovereign 310 The governor general is further responsible for summoning the House of Commons while either the viceroy or monarch can prorogue and dissolve the legislature after which the governor general usually calls for a general election This element of the royal prerogative is unaffected by legislation fixing election dates as An Act to Amend the Canada Elections Act specifies that it does not curtail the Crown s powers 311 The new parliamentary session is marked by either the monarch governor general or some other representative reading the Speech from the Throne 312 Members of Parliament must recite the Oath of Allegiance before they may take their seat Further the official opposition is traditionally dubbed as His Majesty s Loyal Opposition 315 illustrating that while its members are opposed to the incumbent government they remain loyal to the sovereign as personification of the state and its authority 316 The monarch does not have the prerogative to impose and collect new taxes without the authorization of an act of Parliament The consent of the Crown must however be obtained before either of the houses of Parliament may even debate a bill affecting the sovereign s prerogatives or interests and no act of Parliament binds the King or his rights unless the act states that it does 317 318 Courts King on the Bench edit nbsp A Supreme Court of Canada courtroom displaying on the focal wall a rendition of the Royal Arms The sovereign is responsible for rendering justice for all his subjects and is thus traditionally deemed the fount of justice 319 and his position in the Canadian courts formally dubbed the King on the Bench 8 The Arms of His Majesty in Right of Canada are traditionally displayed in Canadian courtrooms 320 as is a portrait of the sovereign 321 The badge of the Supreme Court also bears a St Edward s Crown to symbolize the source of the court s authority The monarch does not personally rule in judicial cases this function of the royal prerogative is instead performed in trust and in the King s name by officers of His Majesty s court 319 Common law holds the notion that the sovereign can do no wrong the monarch cannot be prosecuted in his own courts judged by himself for criminal offences under his own laws 322 Canada inherited the common law version of Crown immunity from British law 323 However over time the scope of said immunity has been steadily reduced by statute law With the passage of relevant legislation through the provincial and federal parliaments the Crown in its public capacity that is lawsuits against the King in Council in all areas of Canada is now liable in tort as any normal person would be 323 civil lawsuits against the Crown are permitted but lawsuits against the monarch personally are not cognizable In international cases as a sovereign and under established principles of international law the King of Canada is not subject to suit in foreign courts without his express consent 282 Within the royal prerogative is also the granting of immunity from prosecution 324 mercy and pardoning offences against the Crown 325 326 Since 1878 the prerogative of pardon has always been exercised upon the recommendation of ministers 327 The Crown and indigenous peoples edit Main article The Canadian Crown and First Nations Inuit and Metis nbsp Mi kmaq leaders present a portrait of Grand Chief Henri Membertou to Queen Elizabeth II in Halifax Nova Scotia 28 June 2010Included in Canada s constitution are the various treaties between the Crown and Canada s First Nations Inuit and Metis peoples who like the Maori and the Treaty of Waitangi in New Zealand 328 generally view the affiliation as being not between them and the ever changing Cabinet but instead with the continuous Crown of Canada as embodied in the reigning sovereign 329 meaning the link between monarch and indigenous peoples in Canada will theoretically last for as long as the sun shines grass grows and rivers flow 330 331 The association stretches back to the first decisions between North American indigenous peoples and European colonialists and over centuries of interface treaties were established concerning the monarch and indigenous nations The only treaties that survived the American Revolution are those in Canada which date to the beginning of the 18th century Today the main guide for relations between the monarchy and Canadian First Nations is King George III s Royal Proclamation of 1763 332 333 while not a treaty it is regarded by First Nations as their Magna Carta or Indian bill of rights 333 334 as it affirmed native title to their lands and made clear that though under the sovereignty of the Crown the aboriginal bands were autonomous political units in a nation to nation association with non native governments 335 336 with the monarch as the intermediary 337 The agreements with the Crown are administered by aboriginal law and overseen by the minister of Crown indigenous relations 338 339 I have greatly appreciated the opportunity to discuss the vital process of reconciliation in this country not a one off act of course but an ongoing commitment to healing respect and understanding with indigenous and non indigenous peoples across Canada committing to reflect honestly and openly on the past and to forge a new relationship for the future 340 Prince Charles Prince of Wales 2022 The link between the Crown and indigenous peoples will sometimes be symbolically expressed through ceremony 341 Gifts have been frequently exchanged and aboriginal titles have been bestowed upon royal and viceregal figures since the early days of indigenous contact with the Crown 346 As far back as 1710 indigenous leaders have met to discuss treaty business with royal family members or viceroys in private audience and many continue to use their connection to the Crown to further their political aims 347 public ceremonies attended by the monarch or another member of the royal family have been employed as a platform on which to present complaints witnessed by both national and international cameras 350 Following country wide protests beginning in 2012 and the close of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission in 2015 focus turned toward rapprochement between the nations in the nation to nation relationship 357 Hereditary chiefs edit Main article Hereditary chiefs in Canada See also History of monarchy in Canada Pre colonial nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Portraits of the Four Mohawk Kings painted in 1710 during their visit with Queen Anne The hereditary chiefs are leaders within First Nations who represent different houses or clans and whose chieftaincies are passed down intergenerationally most First Nations have a hereditary system 358 The positions are rooted in traditional models of Indigenous governance that predate the colonization of Canada 359 360 and are organized in a fashion similar to the occidental idea of monarchy 365 Indeed early European explorers often considered territories belonging to different aboriginal groups to be kingdoms such as along the north shore of the St Lawrence River between the Trinity River and the Isle aux Coudres and the neighbouring kingdom of Canada which stretched west to the Island of Montreal 366 and the leaders of these communities were referred to as kings 347 particularly those chosen through heredity 367 368 Today the hereditary chiefs are not sovereign according to the Supreme Court of Canada the Crown holds sovereignty over the whole of Canada including reservation and traditional lands 372 However by some interpretations of case law from the same court the chiefs have jurisdiction over traditional territories that fall outside of band controlled reservation land 373 374 beyond the elected band councils established by the Indian Act 375 376 Although recognized by and accountable to the federal Crown in Council the Government of Canada band chiefs do not hold the cultural authority of hereditary chiefs who often serve as knowledge keepers responsible for the upholding of a First Nation s traditional customs legal systems and cultural practices 379 When serving as Lieutenant Governor of British Columbia Judith Guichon postulated that the role of hereditary chiefs mirrored that of Canada s constitutional monarch being the representative of sober second thought and wisdom not the next political cycle but rather enduring truths and the evolution of our nation through generations 364 For these reasons the Crown maintains formal relations with Canada s hereditary chiefs including on matters relating to treaty rights and obligations 380 Cultural role editRoyal presence and duties edit Further information Royal tours of Canada nbsp Prince Albert Edward Prince of Wales lays the last stone for the Victoria Bridge in Montreal during his 1860 royal tourMembers of the royal family have been present in Canada since the late 18th century their reasons including participating in military manoeuvres serving as the federal viceroy or undertaking official royal tours which reinforce the country s collective heritage 381 At least one royal tour has been conducted every year between 1957 and 2018 382 The welfare and service function of the monarchy is regarded as an important part of the modern monarchy s role and demonstrates a significant change to the institution in recent generations from a heavily ceremonialized imperial crown to a more demotic and visible head of state interacting with the general population far beyond confined court circles 383 As such a prominent feature of tours are royal walkabouts a tradition initiated in 1939 by Queen Elizabeth when she was in Ottawa and broke from the royal party to speak directly to gathered veterans 384 385 Usually important milestones anniversaries or celebrations of Canadian culture will warrant the presence of the monarch 384 while other members of the royal family will be asked to participate in lesser occasions A household to assist and tend to the monarch forms part of the royal party Official duties involve the sovereign representing the Canadian state at home or abroad or her relations as members of the royal family participating in government organized ceremonies either in Canada or elsewhere n 18 407 sometimes these individuals are employed in asserting Canada s sovereignty over its territories n 19 The advice of the Canadian Cabinet is the impetus for royal participation in any Canadian event though at present the Chief of Protocol and his staff in the Department of Canadian Heritage are as part of the State Ceremonial and Canadian Symbols Program 409 410 responsible for orchestrating any official events in or for Canada that involve the royal family 411 nbsp Prince Philip with the Royal Canadian Regiment as their colonel in chief April 2013Conversely unofficial duties are performed by royal family members for Canadian organizations of which they may be patrons through their attendance at charity events visiting with members of the Canadian Forces as colonel in chief or marking certain key anniversaries 403 404 The invitation and expenses associated with these undertakings are usually borne by the associated organization 403 In 2005 members of the royal family were present at a total of 76 Canadian engagements as well as several more through 2006 and 2007 412 In the period between 2019 and 2022 they carried out 53 engagements the number reduced and all through the latter year and a half being virtual because of restrictions in place during the COVID 19 pandemic 413 The various viceroys took part in 4 023 engagements through 2019 and 2020 both in person and virtually 414 Apart from Canada the King and other members of the royal family regularly perform public duties in the other 14 Commonwealth realms in which the King is head of state This situation however can mean the monarch and or members of the royal family will be promoting one nation and not another a situation that has been met with criticism n 20 Symbols associations and awards edit Main article Canadian royal symbols The main symbol of the monarchy is the sovereign himself 179 described as the personal expression of the Crown in Canada 416 and his image is thus used to signify Canadian sovereignty and government authority his image for instance appearing on currency and his portrait in government buildings 233 The sovereign is further both mentioned in and the subject of songs loyal toasts and salutes 417 A royal cypher appearing on buildings and official seals or a crown seen on provincial and national coats of arms as well as police force and Canadian Forces regimental and maritime badges and rank insignia is also used to illustrate the monarchy as the locus of authority 418 the latter without referring to any specific monarch nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Clockwise from top equestrian statue of King Edward VII Queen s Park Toronto George IV s royal charter establishing the University of Toronto flag of the Canadian Armed Forces with a St Edward s Crown atop the forces emblem Sovereign s Medal for Volunteers with the effigy of Elizabeth II wearing a snowflake diadem Since the days of King Louis XIV 419 the monarch is the fount of all honours in Canada and the orders 419 420 decorations and medals form an integral element of the Crown 419 Hence the insignia and medallions for these awards bear a crown cypher and or portrait of the monarch Similarly the country s heraldic authority was created by Queen Elizabeth II and operating under the authority of the governor general grants new coats of arms flags and badges in Canada Use of the royal crown in such symbols is a gift from the monarch showing royal support and or association and requires his approval before being added 418 421 Members of the royal family also act as ceremonial colonels in chief commodores in chief captains general air commodores in chief generals and admirals of various elements of the Canadian Forces reflecting the Crown s relationship with the country s military through participation in events both at home and abroad n 21 The monarch also serves as the Commissioner in Chief and Prince Edward and Princess Anne as Honorary Deputy Commissioners of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police 422 A number of Canadian civilian organizations have association with the monarchy either through their being founded via a royal charter having been granted the right to use the prefix royal before their name or because at least one member of the royal family serves as a patron In addition to The Prince s Trust Canada established by Charles III when Prince of Wales some other charities and volunteer organizations have also been founded as gifts to or in honour of some of Canada s monarchs or members of the royal family such as the Victorian Order of Nurses a gift to Queen Victoria for her Diamond Jubilee in 1897 the Canadian Cancer Fund set up in honour of King George V s Silver Jubilee in 1935 and the Queen Elizabeth II Fund to Aid in Research on the Diseases of Children A number of awards in Canada are likewise issued in the name of previous or present members of the royal family Further organizations will give commemorative gifts to members of the royal family to mark a visit or other important occasion All Canadian coins bear the image of the monarch reigning at the time of the coin s production with an inscription Dei Gratia Rex often abbreviated to DG Rex a Latin phrase translated to English as by the grace of god king 423 During the reign of a female monarch rex is replaced with regina which is Latin for queen Throughout the 1970s symbols of the monarch and monarchy were slowly removed from the public eye For instance the Queen s portrait was seen less in public schools and the Royal Mail became Canada Post Smith attributed this to the attitude the government of the day held toward Canada s past 424 though it never raised the policy in public or during any of the constitutional conferences held that decade 129 Andrew Heard argued however that dispensing with such symbols was necessary to facilitate the simultaneous increasing embrace of the monarch as Queen of Canada 425 Emblems such as the Royal Coat of Arms remained however and others such as the monarch s royal standard were created With the later developments of the governor general s flag foundation of the Canadian Heraldic Authority royal standards for other members of the royal family and the like Canada along with New Zealand is one of the two realms that have paid the greatest attention to the nationalization of the visual symbols of the monarchy 426 Significance to Canadian identity edit Main article Canadian identity In his 2018 book The Canadian Kingdom 150 Years of Constitutional Monarchy Jackson wrote that the Canadian manifestation of the monarchy is not only historical and constitutional it is political cultural and social reflecting and contributing to change and evolution in Canada s governance autonomy and identity 69 Since at least the 1930s 427 supporters of the Crown have held the opinion that the monarch is a unifying focal point for the nation s historic consciousness the country s heritage being unquestionably linked with the history of monarchy 381 and Canadian patriotism traditions and shared values 381 around which coheres the nation s sense of a continuing personality 428 This infusion of monarchy into Canadian governance and society helps strengthen Canadian identity 381 and distinguish it from American identity 429 a difference that has existed since at least 1864 when it was a factor in the Fathers of Confederation choosing to keep constitutional monarchy for the new country in 1866 430 Former Governor General Vincent Massey articulated in 1967 that the monarchy stands for qualities and institutions which mean Canada to every one of us and which for all our differences and all our variety have kept Canada Canadian 431 I want the Crown in Canada to represent everything that is best and most admired in the Canadian ideal I will continue to do my best to make it so during my lifetime 432 Elizabeth II 1973 But Canadians were through the late 1960s to the 2000s encouraged by federal and provincial governments to neglect ignore forget reject debase suppress even hate and certainly treat as foreign what their parents and grandparents whether spiritual or blood regarded as the basis of Canadian nationhood autonomy and history including the monarchy 433 resulting in a disconnect between the Canadian populace and their monarch 430 Former Governor General Roland Michener said in 1970 that anti monarchists claimed the Canadian Crown is foreign and incompatible with Canada s multicultural society 286 which the government promoted as a Canadian identifier and Lawrence Martin called in 2007 for Canada to become a republic in order to re brand the nation 434 However Michener also stated the monarchy is our own by inheritance and choice and contributes much to our distinctive Canadian identity and our chances of independent survival amongst the republics of North and South America 286 Journalist Christina Blizzard emphasized in 2009 that the monarchy made Canada a haven of peace and justice for immigrants from around the world 435 while Michael Valpy contended in 2009 that the Crown s nature permitted non conformity amongst its subjects thereby opening the door to multiculturalism and pluralism 46 Johnston described the Crown as providing space for our values and beliefs as Canadians 180 In media and popular culture edit Further information Canadian royal symbols Artworks and Personality and image of Elizabeth II Painting and sculpture edit Aside from official artworks such as monuments and portraits commissioned by government bodies Canadian painters have by their own volition or for private organizations created more expressive informal depictions of Canada s monarchs and other members of the royal family ranging from fine art to irreverent graffiti For example the English Canadian artist Frederic Marlett Bell Smith produced The Artist Painting Queen Victoria in 1895 which now resides at the National Gallery of Canada At Library and Archives Canada is the painting The Unveiling of the National War Memorial capturing the dedication of the monument in Ottawa by King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1939 though the artist is unknown 436 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Clockwise from top portrait of Elizabeth II by Lorena Ziraldo 2014 wax figure of Elizabeth II at the Royal London Wax Museum Victoria Frederic Marlett Bell Smith s The Artist Painting Queen Victoria 1895 pop art portrait of Victoria Toronto The Unveiling of the National War Memorial 1939 irreverent graffiti in Montreal depicting Elizabeth II Hilton Hassell depicted Princess Elizabeth later Queen Elizabeth II square dancing at Rideau Hall in 1951 and a portrait of Elizabeth II by Lorena Ziraldo of Ottawa was featured in the Hill Times and Ottawa Citizen Charles Pachter from Toronto fashioned the painting Noblesse Oblige in 1972 which shows Queen Elizabeth II in her Guards Regiment uniform and saluting as she did during Trooping the Colour ceremonies except atop a moose instead of her horse Burmese Despite great controversy when it was first exhibited 437 it has become a Canadian cultural image the people s image 437 438 Pachter subsequently made numerous variations on the theme 439 including Queen amp Moose 1973 440 and The Queen on a Moose 1988 441 The artist said there was an amazing symmetry of putting the sovereign of her northern realm Canada on an animal who is the monarch of the north awkward but majestic 437 Pachter made similar pieces showing Elizabeth s son Prince Charles now King Charles III and his wife Camilla standing alongside a moose 438 and Charles s son Prince William and his wife Catherine with Canadian wildlife such as a moose and a squirrel 442 For Elizabeth II s Diamond Jubilee Pachter created a series of fake postage stamps using all his paintings that include members of the royal family 437 which he called my branded images for Canada 443 Some were featured on accessory items sold at the Hudson s Bay Company 443 Portraits of Elizabeth II hung in several hockey arenas across Canada after her accession in 1952 One was in place in Maple Leaf Gardens until the early 1970s when owner Harold Ballard had it removed to construct more seating stating if people want to see pictures of the Queen they can go to an art gallery 444 Three large portraits of Elizabeth II were created for Winnipeg Arena on display there from the building s opening in 1955 to 1999 448 At the time of the sesquicentennial of Confederation in 2017 Vancouver Island based 449 artist Timothy Hoey created a Canada 150 version of his decade long O Canada project painting 150 Canadian icons in acrylic paint on 20 3 by 25 4 centimetre eight by 10 inch boards 450 451 Among them are numerous depictions of Queen Elizabeth II with other Canadian icons such as beavers Cheezies the Grey Cup 450 the Stanley Cup 451 a bottle of beer O Canada Liz Enjoying Some Wobbly Pops 452 Rush O Canada Closer to the Heart the Hudson s Bay point blanket 452 the Trans Canada Highway a birch canoe a buckskin jacket the Royal Canadian Mounted Police uniform a Montreal Canadiens hockey sweater and so on 450 Hoey had previously painted Elizabeth in formal attire and tiara holding a hockey stick in front of a Hudson s Bay point blanket the work titled O Canada Liz 453 In 2021 he depicted the Queen in a decorative hat uniform of the Vancouver Canucks from the 1978 1979 season and full goaltender equipment 454 The also exist wax sculptures of Queen Elizabeth II in private museums such as the Royal London Wax Museum in Victoria British Columbia and the Wax Museum of History in Niagara Falls Ontario 455 Television edit The television series Rideau Hall starring Bette MacDonald was produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and aired for one season in 2002 Its premise was a brash one hit wonder disco artist being appointed governor general on the advice of a republican prime minister 456 457 External videos nbsp Scott Thompson as The Queen Source Broadway Video Canadian comedian Scott Thompson regularly played a parody of Queen Elizabeth II in a Canadian context on the sketch comedy television show The Kids in the Hall 458 as well as in other productions such as The Queen s Toast A Royal Wedding Special 459 and Conan Thompson also voiced a portrayal of Queen Elizabeth II in Canada in the animated television show Fugget About It in the episode Royally Screwed 460 The Canadian monarchy was parodied in Royal Pudding the third episode of the 15th season of the animated television show South Park which first aired on 11 May 2011 461 The opening focuses on a spoof of the wedding of Prince William and Catherine Middleton 462 463 featuring caricatures of Queen Elizabeth II Prince William Prince of Wales and Catherine Princess of Wales Specific mention is made of the Queen of Canada and the Canadian royal family 464 The show subsequently in the second episode of the 26th season The Worldwide Privacy Tour parodied the Duke and Duchess of Sussex as a prince of Canada and the wife who after hostile treatment at the funeral of the late Queen of Canada go on national television and a world tour demanding people and the media not pay attention to them and branding themselves as victims 465 Royal family and house edit nbsp Members of the royal family standing in convertibles during the opening of 1978 Commonwealth Games in Edmonton Elizabeth II front left Prince Philip front right Prince Andrew rear left and Prince Edward rear right The Canadian royal family is the group of people who are comparatively closely related to the country s monarch and 466 as such belong to the House of Windsor and owe their allegiance specifically to the reigning king or queen of Canada 467 There is no legal definition of who is or is not a member of the royal family though the Government of Canada s website lists working members of the royal family 468 Unlike in the United Kingdom the monarch is the only member of the royal family with a title established through Canadian law and is styled by convention as his her majesty 469 as would be a queen consort Otherwise the remaining family members are as a courtesy styled and titled as they are in the UK 469 according to letters patent issued there 470 471 but with French translations 472 Those in the royal family are distant relations of the Belgian Danish Greek Norwegian Spanish and Swedish royal families and 473 given the shared nature of the Canadian monarch are also members of the British royal family However because Canada and the UK are independent of one another it is inappropriate to refer in the Canadian context to the family of the monarch as the British royal family 474 as is frequently done by Canadian and other media 475 476 Further in addition to the five Canadian citizens in the royal family n 22 the sovereign is considered Canadian 484 and those among his relations who do not meet the requirements of Canadian citizenship law are considered Canadian which entitles them to Canadian consular assistance and the protection of the King s armed forces of Canada when they are in need of protection or aid outside of the Commonwealth realms 467 as well as since 2013 substantive appointment to the Order of Canada and Order of Military Merit 485 486 487 Beyond formalities members of the royal family have on occasion been said by the media and non governmental organizations to be Canadian n 23 have declared themselves to be Canadian n 24 and some past members have lived in Canada for extended periods as viceroy or for other reasons n 25 nbsp King Edward VIII unveiling the figure Canada Bereft on the Canadian National Vimy Memorial in July 1936According to the Canadian Royal Heritage Trust Prince Edward Augustus Duke of Kent and Strathearn due to his having lived in Canada between 1791 and 1800 and fathering Queen Victoria is the ancestor of the modern Canadian royal family 499 Nonetheless the concept of the Canadian royal family did not emerge until after the passage of the Statute of Westminster in 1931 when Canadian officials only began to overtly consider putting the principles of Canada s new status as an independent kingdom into effect 502 Initially the monarch was the only member of the royal family to carry out public ceremonial duties solely on the advice of Canadian ministers King Edward VIII became the first to do so when in July 1936 he dedicated the Canadian National Vimy Memorial in France n 18 Over the decades however the monarch s children grandchildren cousins and their respective spouses began to also perform functions at the direction of the Canadian Crown in Council representing the monarch within Canada or abroad in a role specifically as members of the Canadian royal family 503 However it was not until October 2002 when the term Canadian royal family was first used publicly and officially by one of its members in a speech to the Nunavut legislature at its opening Queen Elizabeth II stated I am proud to be the first member of the Canadian royal family to be greeted in Canada s newest territory 504 505 Princess Anne used it again when speaking at Rideau Hall in 2014 506 as did the now King Charles in Halifax the same year 507 Also in 2014 then Premier of Saskatchewan Brad Wall called Prince Edward a member of the Canadian royal family 508 By 2011 both Canadian and British media were referring to Canada s royal family or the Canadian royal family 513 While Heard observed in the 2018 that no direct legal action has so far created a Canadian royal family 514 he also asserted that the Canadian Heraldic Authority creating uniquely Canadian standards for members of the royal family other than the monarch was a symbolic localization of the royal family 515 Sean Palmer agreed stating the banners are a sign the country has taken ownership not only of the Queen of Canada but of the other members of her family as well and that doing so was another formal affirmation of the concept of a Canadian royal family as distinct as the Queen of Canada is from the Queen of the United Kingdom 505 Jai Patel and Sally Raudon also noted in 2019 that the purpose of these heraldic banners was to recognize the owners roles as members of the Canadian royal family 516 Federal residences and royal household editMain article Government Houses of Canada nbsp Rideau Hall nbsp Citadelle of QuebecOfficial residences of the sovereign and their representative the governor general A number of buildings across Canada are reserved by the Crown for the use of the monarch and his viceroys Each is called Government House but may be customarily known by some specific name The sovereign s and governor general s official residences are Rideau Hall in Ottawa and the Citadelle in Quebec City n 26 529 Each of these royal seats holds pieces from the Crown Collection 530 Further though neither was ever used for their intended purpose Hatley Castle in British Columbia was purchased in 1940 by King George VI in Right of Canada to use as his home during the course of the Second World War 531 and the Emergency Government Headquarters built in 1959 at CFS Carp and decommissioned in 1994 included a residential apartment for the sovereign or governor general in the case of a nuclear attack on Ottawa 532 533 Monarchs and members of their family have also owned in a private capacity homes and land in Canada King Edward VIII owned Bedingfield Ranch near Pekisko Alberta 534 John Campbell Marquess of Lorne and Princess Louise owned a cottage on the Cascapedia River in Quebec 535 and Princess Margaret owned Portland Island between its gifting to her by the Crown in Right of British Columbia in 1958 and her death in 2002 though she offered it back to the Crown on permanent loan in 1966 and the island and surrounding waters eventually became Princess Margaret Marine Park 536 537 nbsp Prince Arthur at Mohawk Chapel in 1913 The sanctuary was designated a chapel royal in 1904 In addition to a maitre d hotel chefs footmen valets dressers pages aides de camp drawn from the junior officers of the armed forces equerries and others at Rideau Hall 538 the King appoints various people to his Canadian household to assist him in carrying out his official duties on behalf of Canada Along with the Canadian secretary to the King 411 the monarch s entourage includes the equerry in waiting to the King the King s police officer two ladies in waiting for the Queen 539 the King s honorary physician the King s honorary dental surgeon and the King s honorary nursing officer 540 the latter three being drawn from the Canadian Forces 143 Prince Edward Duke of Edinburgh also has a Canadian private secretary and his wife 541 Sophie Duchess of Edinburgh a lady in waiting 542 Air transportation for the royal family is provided by the Royal Canadian Air Force 412 Transport Squadron There are three household regiments specifically attached to the royal household the Governor General s Foot Guards the Governor General s Horse Guards and the Canadian Grenadier Guards There are also three chapels royal all in Ontario 543 Mohawk Chapel in Brantford Christ Church Royal Chapel near Deseronto and St Catherine s Chapel in Massey College in Toronto Though not officially a royal chapel St Bartholomew s Anglican Church located across MacKay Street from Rideau Hall is regularly used by governors general and their families and sometimes by the sovereign and other members of the royal family as well as by viceregal household staff their families and members of the Governor General s Foot Guards for whom the church also serves as a regimental chapel 544 Security edit nbsp A Queen s Police Officer drawn from the RCMP with Elizabeth II in Toronto nbsp The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge with an RCMP escort in Charlottetown The Royal Canadian Mounted Police is tasked with providing security to the sovereign the governor general starting from when he or she is made governor general designate 545 and other members of the royal family as outlined in the RCMP Regulations the force has a duty to protect individuals designated by the minister of public safety including certain members of the royal family when visiting 546 The RCMP s provision of service is determined based on threat and risk assessment the seniority of the individual in terms of precedence and n 27 for members of the royal family the nature of the royal tour i e an official tour by the King or on behalf of the King or a working or private visit 546 The governor general receives round the clock security from the Governor General Protection Detail 548 part of the Personal Protection Group based at Rideau Hall History editMain article History of monarchy in Canada Further information List of Canadian monarchs From colonies to independence edit nbsp King Francis I of France established colonies in Acadia and Canada in 1534 nbsp Queen Victoria in 1870 three years after her royal assent to the British North America Act 1867 creating the Canadian federation The Canadian monarchy can trace its ancestral lineage back to the kings of the Angles and the early Scottish kings and through the centuries since the claims of King Henry VII in 1497 and King Francis I in 1534 both being blood relatives of the current Canadian monarch Former Prime Minister Stephen Harper said of the Crown that it links us all together with the majestic past that takes us back to the Tudors the Plantagenets Magna Carta habeas corpus petition of rights and English common law 549 Though the first French and British colonizers of Canada interpreted the hereditary nature of some indigenous North American chieftainships as a form of monarchy 553 it is generally accepted that Canada has been a territory of a monarch or a monarchy in its own right only since the establishment of the French colony of Canada in the early 16th century 47 according to historian Jacques Monet the Canadian Crown is one of the few that have survived through uninterrupted succession since before its inception 58 After the Canadian colonies of France were via war and treaties ceded to the British Crown and the population was greatly expanded by those loyal to George III fleeing north from persecution during and following the American Revolution British North America was in 1867 confederated by Queen Victoria to form Canada as a kingdom in its own right 555 By the end of the First World War the increased fortitude of Canadian nationalism inspired the country s leaders to push for greater independence from the King in his British Council resulting in the creation of the uniquely Canadian monarchy through the Statute of Westminster which was granted royal assent in 1931 556 557 Only five years later Canada had three successive kings in the space of one year with the death of George V the accession and abdication of Edward VIII and his replacement by George VI From 1786 through to the 1930s members of the royal family toured Canada including Prince William later King William IV Prince Edward Duke of Kent Prince Albert Edward Prince of Wales later King Edward VII Prince Arthur Duke of Connaught and Strathearn John Campbell Marquess of Lorne and Princess Louise Prince Leopold Princess Marie Louise Prince George Duke of Cornwall and York later King George V and Princess Victoria later Queen Mary Prince Arthur son of the Duke of Connaught Princess Patricia Prince Albert later King George VI Prince Edward Prince of Wales later King Edward VIII Prince George Duke of Kent and Prince Henry Duke of Gloucester 558 The Canadian Crown edit nbsp King George VI and Queen Elizabeth attending the King s Plate in Toronto during their 1939 royal tourKing George VI became in 1939 the first reigning monarch of Canada to tour the country doing so with his wife Queen Elizabeth Only weeks later the King on the advice of his Canadian Prime Minister declared war on Nazi Germany 559 Throughout the conflict George boosted the morale of his Canadian troops 560 while Governor General the Earl of Athlone the King s uncle supported the war effort in Canada The men were occasionally assisted in their efforts by other members of the royal family nbsp Queen Elizabeth II wearing her coronation gown with Prince Philip during the opening of the 23rd Canadian Parliament October 1957Elizabeth II undertook her first tour of Canada in 1951 when Princess Elizabeth Duchess of Edinburgh She would go on to officiate at various moments of importance in the nation s history She opened Parliament in 1957 561 on the same tour delivering from Rideau Hall her first ever live television broadcast 562 and in 1977 opened the St Lawrence Seaway in 1959 381 celebrated Canada s centennial 381 and proclaimed the country to be fully independent via constitutional patriation in 1982 495 That act is said to have entrenched the monarchy in Canada 563 due to the stringent amending formula that must be followed in order to alter the monarchy in any way 186 Through the 1960s and 1970s the rise of Quebec nationalism and changes in Canadian identity created an atmosphere where the purpose and role of the monarchy came into question Some references to the monarch and the monarchy were removed from the public eye and moves were made by the federal government to constitutionally alter the Crown s place and role in Canada first by explicit legal amendments and later by subtle attrition 566 But provincial and federal ministers along with loyal national citizen s organizations ensured that the system remained the same in essence 567 The Queen publicly expressed her personal support for the Meech Lake Accord which attempted to bring Quebec governmental support to the patriated constitution 568 The accord failed prompting Elizabeth to deliver a nationally broadcast speech in Ottawa supporting Canadian unity 569 In the lead up to the referendum on Quebec independence in 1995 the Queen was tricked by a Montreal radio DJ into revealing her desire to see the no side win offering to help however she could 570 571 Elizabeth followed the results closely on the day of the vote 571 Members of the royal family continued to be present at important national events through the decades the Queen in 1970 1971 and 1973 respectively marked the anniversaries of Manitoba British Columbia and Prince Edward Island becoming Canadian provinces celebrated Ontario s and New Brunswick s bicentennials in 1984 and the 125th anniversary of Confederation in 1992 and she opened the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal 381 and Nunavut s parliament in 1999 Prince Charles Prince of Wales attended the 100th anniversary of Treaty 7 in 1977 commemorated in 1983 the bicentennial of United Empire Loyalists settling in New Brunswick and Nova Scotia and with Diana Princess of Wales opened Expo 86 in Vancouver Between them the Queen and her family opened numerous Commonwealth Games Commonwealth Heads of Government Meetings conferences hospitals community centres and the like handed out The Duke of Edinburgh Awards at ceremonies across the country and visited many regiments and branches of the Canadian Armed Forces 572 The 21st century edit nbsp Elizabeth II the first monarch to be titled Queen of Canada wearing her Canadian insignia as sovereign of the Order of Canada and the Order of Military Merit 2010By 2002 the royal tour and associated fetes for the Queen s Golden Jubilee proved popular with Canadians across the country 573 574 575 though Canada s first republican organization since the 1830s was also founded that year Celebrations took place across the country to mark the Queen s Diamond Jubilee in 2012 576 577 the first such event in Canada since that for Victoria in 1897 On 9 September 2015 she became the second longest reigning monarch in Canadian history preceded only by King Louis XIV 578 events were organized to celebrate her as the longest reigning sovereign in Canada s modern era 579 Prince Charles represented his mother the Queen two years later at the main events in Ottawa recognizing the 150th anniversary of Confederation 580 During the COVID 19 pandemic the Queen expressed her support for all Canadians and thanks to those who were caring for the vulnerable and providing essential services 581 As the pandemic waned into 2022 celebrations were mounted around the country and throughout the year to mark the Queen s Platinum Jubilee 582 the first ever such event in Canadian history 583 It was also though the first time since at least Queen Victoria s Golden Jubilee in 1887 that the federal Cabinet did not advise the Crown to create an associated medal 584 In response six provinces produced their own Platinum Jubilee medals another first 585 The subject of reconciliation with Canada s indigenous peoples came to the forefront of the public consciousness in 2021 particularly in regard to residential schools Statues of Queen Victoria and Queen Elizabeth II in Winnipeg were vandalized 586 587 On the first National Day for Truth and Reconciliation Elizabeth made a public statement saying she joins with all Canadians to reflect on the painful history that indigenous peoples endured in residential schools in Canada and on the work that remains to heal and to continue to build an inclusive society 588 In the same year the Queen appointed Mary Simon as the first indigenous governor general in Canadian history n 28 589 During Charles s tour for his mother s Platinum Jubilee the BBC s royal correspondent observed that there was no shying away from acknowledging and highlighting the scandalous way many indigenous peoples have been treated in Canada 351 Reign of Charles III edit nbsp King Charles III meets Governor General Mary Simon 5 May 2023Queen Elizabeth II died on 8 September 2022 and was succeeded by her eldest son who took the regnal name Charles III The Queen s final public statement was sent on 7 September in the aftermath of the 2022 Saskatchewan stabbings 590 591 stating she mourn s with all Canadians at this tragic time 592 Elizabeth reigned for almost half of Canada s history since Confederation 593 being only the sixth Canadian monarch since 1867 594 Immediately following a formal meeting of the King s Privy Council for Canada the new king was proclaimed on 10 September in a ceremony at Rideau Hall 595 596 On 4 May 2023 the King held audience with Simon and indigenous leaders who also attended his coronation two days later 597 Public perception and understanding editPrior to the 1970s Canadians view of the monarchy was more focused on the person of the monarch than the institution s place in the country s framework 515 Monet and Frank MacKinnon discerned in that decade that the Crown as a legal and constitutional entity had instead became the cynosure 598 599 Smith in 2017 and Jackson in 2018 observed the shift continuing especially as the process of Canadianization of the Crown picked up momentum in the early 21st century 600 601 Still beginning in the later decades of the 20th century commentators stated that contemporary Canadians had and have a poor understanding of the Canadian monarchy 602 something the Monarchist League of Canada MLC claims opponents of the monarchy exacerbate by spreading disinformation and then take advantage of 603 Jackson wrote in his book The Crown and Canadian Federalism that this is part of a wider ignorance about Canadian civics 604 and Hugo Cyr agreed 605 while Smith researched for his 1995 book The Invisible Crown he found it difficult to find anyone who could talk knowledgeably about the subject 606 Former Governors General Clarkson and Johnston made similar observations 180 607 and Senator Lowell Murray wrote in 2003 the Crown has become irrelevant to most Canadians understanding of our system of government which he attributed to the fault of successive generations of politicians of an educational system that has never given the institution due study and of past viceregal incumbents themselves 608 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Examples of the prevalence of royal references and images around Canada clockwise from top nickel with the effigy of Queen Elizabeth II on the obverse Patricia Lake named for Princess Patricia of Connaught badge of the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary Ontario vehicle licence plate showing the silhouette of a crown burgee of the Royal Vancouver Yacht Club Prince Edward Island named for Prince Edward Duke of Kent and Strathearn Queen station beneath Toronto s Queen Street so named for Queen Victoria On education teacher and author Nathan Tidridge asserted that beginning in the 1960s the role of the Crown disappeared from provincial education curricula as the general subject of civics came to receive less attention 565 He said Canadians are being educated to be illiterate ambivalent or even hostile toward our constitutional monarchy 604 The MLC agreed stating Canada has an educational system which unfortunately often fails to provide comprehensive knowledge of Canada s constitution 603 Michael Valpy also pointed to the fact that the Crown s role in the machinery of Canada s constitutional monarchy rarely sees daylight Only a handful of times in our history has it been subjected to glaring sunshine unfortunately resulting in a black hole of public understanding as to how it works 609 He later iterated the public s attention span on the constitutional intricacies of the monarchy is clinically short 610 At the same time it has been theorized the monarchy is so prevalent in Canada by way of all manner of symbols place names royal tours etcetera that Canadians fail to take note of it the monarchy functions like a tasteful wallpaper pattern in Canada enjoyable in an absent minded way but so ubiquitous as to be almost invisible 483 John Pepall argued in 1990 that among all this a Liberal inspired republican misconception of the role of governor general had taken root though the Conservative government headed by Brian Mulroney exacerbated the matter 611 The position of prime minister has simultaneously undergone with encouragement from its occupants 611 what has been described as a presidentialization 612 613 to the point that its incumbents publicly outshine the actual head of state 614 615 David S Donovan felt Canadians mostly consider the monarch and her representatives as purely ceremonial and symbolic figures 616 while also still viewing the sovereign as British even if they understand he is King of Canada 514 It was argued by Alfred Neitsch that this undermined the Crown s legitimacy as a check and balance in the governmental system 617 a situation Helen Forsey daughter of Canadian constitutional expert Eugene Forsey said prime ministers take advantage of portraying themselves as the embodiment of popular democracy and the reserve powers of the Crown as illegitimate n 29 The issue is particularly acute in Quebec 294 where sovereigntist politicians consider the Canadian monarchy as British foreign and consequently as symbol of oppression 618 Beginning slightly earlier a growing interest in the Crown and its prerogatives was observed as evidenced by a burst of articles books and conferences 606 the monarchy attracted increased attention from academics as well as those involved with the law government and public policy 619 This was attributed to the coincidental occurrence of publicly prominent events over a number of years including the 2008 prorogation dispute an increased use of royal symbols as directed by the Cabinet while headed by Stephen Harper including three consecutive royal tours 620 court cases focusing on the Oath of Citizenship and increasingly active governors Smith and Lagasse noted in early 2016 that post secondary students were giving more focus to the subject of the Crown 606 nbsp The statue of Queen Victoria at the Manitoba Legislative Building that was destroyed by protesters on Canada Day 2021The relationship between Canada s Indigenous peoples and the monarch remains unchanged aside from the issue of reconciliation arising in it through the late 2010s into the 2020s 601 when there were some assertions by activists and in the media that the monarchy and the Queen herself represented colonialism 625 and racism 626 and she did not do enough to either prevent or rectify supposed offences 623 Those who made such claims also though mistook the independent Canadian Crown 627 as the British Crown in Canada and demonstrated a misunderstanding of the Crown indigenous peoples relationship 628 629 and the workings of constitutional monarchy and responsible government 630 in which the sovereign must outside of constitutional crises follow the directions of his or her ministers and parliamentarians 634 The leader of the Parti Quebecois Paul St Pierre Plamondon claimed in 2022 we cannot overlook that she Queen Elizabeth II represented an institution the British Crown that has caused significant harm to Quebecers and Indigenous nations 618 Within Quebec too the Canadian Crown is frequently misrepresented as the British Crown and that false foreignness used in political particularly sovereigntist discourse as an argument in favour of extracting the Crown from Quebec or Quebec from Canada For instance in the televised Radio Canada leaders debate on 22 September 2022 during that year s general election in the province the moderator Patrice Roy asked the panel with incredulous chuckles should we still in Quebec swear allegiance to the British Crown thus Charles III to take one s seat in the National Assembly 635 Bloc Quebecois leader Yves Francois Blanchet on 26 October 2022 tabled a motion in the House of Commons proposing that the House express its desire to sever ties between the Canadian state and the British monarchy 636 This motion was defeated 266 to 44 636 Debate editMain article Debate on the monarchy in Canada Further information Monarchism in Canada and Republicanism in Canada Outside of academic circles there has been little national debate on the monarchy 637 The position of monarch in Canada is highly protected by the Constitution Act 1982 which mandates that any major constitutional amendment such as any change to the monarchy must receive unanimous consent of the Senate the House of Commons and all 10 provincial legislative assemblies and treaties between the Crown and indigenous peoples that play a role in entrenching the monarchy n 30 nbsp Prince Edward Earl of Wessex speaks with members of the Monarchist League of Canada at a League reception held at the Spoke Club in TorontoCanada has two special interest groups representing the debate who occasionally argue the issue in the media the Monarchist League of Canada MLC and Citizens for a Canadian Republic 639 640 There are also other organizations that support and advocate the monarchy such as the Institute for the Study of the Crown in Canada 641 the Canadian Royal Heritage Trust 642 the Friends of the Canadian Crown 643 Canadian Friends of the Royal Family 644 the Societe de la Couronne du Canada 645 the Orange Order in Canada 646 and the United Empire Loyalists Association of Canada 647 Out of Canada s four most prominent political parties neither the Liberal Party nor the Conservative Party are officially in favour of abolishing the monarchy the Conservative Party cite support for constitutional monarchy as a founding principle in its policy declaration 648 and the New Democratic Party has no official position on the role of the Crown Only some members of Parliament belonging to these parties and the leaders of the Bloc Quebecois have made any statements suggesting abolition of the monarchy 649 650 Opinion polls on the Canadian monarchy have been regularly conducted since the 1990s An analysis of these polls in 2008 highlighted an increased disaffection with the monarchy albeit with internal contradictions in specific polling results with some criticizing the polling questions for using inconsistent and sometimes ambiguous wording 651 Questions often describe the monarch or monarchy as British terminology at odds with the contemporary situation in Canada wherein the monarchy is a Canadian institution 653 separate from that of the United Kingdom 654 and it the Crown and royal family are referred to as Canadian 660 Both monarchists and republicans agree the populace s general lack of understanding about the monarchy affects opinions 603 661 The idea of a uniquely Canadian monarch 662 either one descended from the House of Windsor or coming from a First Nations royal house 666 has been proffered as an alternative However there has been no popular or official support for such a change See also editBC AB SK MB ON QC NB PE NS NL YT NT NU nbsp Monarchy by provinces List of monarchies Monarchies in the Americas Royal and viceroyal transport in Canada Royal eponyms in Canada States headed by Elizabeth II The Canadian Crown and Indigenous peoples of Canada The Canadian Crown and the Canadian Armed Forces nbsp Canada portal nbsp Monarchy portal nbsp Politics portalNotes edit The date of the first establishment of monarchy in Canada varies some sources give the year as 1497 when John Cabot landed somewhere along the North American coast most likely Nova Scotia or Newfoundland claiming an undefined extent of land for King Henry VII 42 while others put it at 1534 when the colony of Canada was founded in the name of King Francis I 49 Historian Carolyn Harris places the beginning of Canada s monarchical government at the appointment of Samuel de Champlain as Governor of New France representing King Louis XIII in 1627 50 Although the exact date differs the fact that a monarchical form of governance has existed since the 16th century is in common agreement 56 The term was first coined by Governor General the Lord Grey in 1905 when he stated in a telegram to King Edward VII regarding the inauguration of Alberta and Saskatchewan into Confederation each one a new leaf in Your Majesty s Maple Crown 67 a b On a number of occasions the sovereign has carried out foreign relations as the representative uniquely of Canada such as the visits to the United States by King George VI in 1939 and Queen Elizabeth II in 1957 The English Court of Appeal ruled in 1982 while there is only one person who is the Sovereign within the British Commonwealth in matters of law and government the Queen of the United Kingdom for example is entirely independent and distinct from the Queen of Canada 74 In 1997 then Prime Minister of the United Kingdom Tony Blair intended to offer a life peerage to Canadian businessman Conrad Black However citing the 1919 Nickle Resolution the Canadian Cabinet advised the Queen not to grant Black such an honour If Blair had not yielded the Queen would have been in the situation of having to grant an honour on the advice of her British Prime Minister and to object to the same as Queen of Canada on the advice of then Canadian Prime Minister Jean Chretien For example Edward VIII was never crowned yet was undoubtedly king during his short time on the throne The only Canadian monarch to abdicate Edward VIII did so with the authorization of the Canadian government granted in His Majesty s Declaration of Abdication Act 1936 and the Succession to the Throne Act 1937 later confirmed this in law Gary Toffoli of the Canadian Royal Heritage Trust stated that the approval given by the Queen in her Canadian Council in 1981 to the marriage of Charles Prince of Wales and Lady Diana Spencer 120 separately to the same approval given by the Queen in her British Council illustrated the existence of the Royal Marriages Act in Canadian law 121 In 1947 the King in his Canadian Council gave the same consent to the marriage of Princess Elizabeth to Philip Mountbatten again separate from the approval he gave in his British Council 120 Upon acceding to the throne on 8 September 2022 King Charles III stated I am deeply aware of this great inheritance and of the duties and heavy responsibilities of sovereignty which have now passed to me In taking up these responsibilities I shall strive to follow the inspiring example I have been set in upholding constitutional government and to seek the peace harmony and prosperity of the Commonwealth realms and territories throughout the world 176 For example if a lawsuit is filed against the federal government the respondent is formally described as His Majesty the King in Right of Canada or simply Rex 143 Likewise in a case in which a party sues both the province of Saskatchewan and the federal government the respondents would be formally called His Majesty the King in Right of Saskatchewan and His Majesty the King in Right of Canada 184 Illustrative of this arrangement is property transfers of this the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources states When public land is required by the federal government or one of its departments or any provincial ministry the land itself is not transferred What is transferred is the responsibility to manage the lands on behalf of Her Majesty the Queen HMQ This is accomplished by an order in council or a minister s order which transfers management of land either from HMQ in right of Ontario to HMQ in right of Canada as represented by a department or to HMQ in right of Ontario as represented by another ministry The Crown does not transfer ownership to itself 185 Robert E Hawkins called this inefficient efficiency which can be placed alongside the other oxymorons that convention embeds in our constitution oxymorons like loyal opposition liberal democracy and constitutional monarchy itself 190 The sovereign has been described by Eugene Forsey as the symbolic embodiment of the people not a particular group or interest or party but the people the whole people 89 his daughter Helen Forsey said of his opinion on the Crown for him the essence of the monarchy was its impartial representation of the common interests of the citizenry as a whole as opposed to those of any particular government 89 The Department of Canadian Heritage said the Crown serves as the personal symbol of allegiance unity and authority for all Canadians 75 209 a concept akin to that expressed by King Louis XIV l Etat c est moi or I am the state 210 Robertson Davies stated in 1994 the Crown is the consecrated spirit of Canada 211 and past Ontario chairman of the Monarchist League of Canada Gary Toffoli opined the Queen is the legal embodiment of the state at both the national and the provincial levels She is our sovereign and it is the role of the Queen recognized by the constitutional law of Canada to embody the state 212 As Peter Boyce put it The Crown as a concept cannot be disentangled from the person of the monarch but standard reference to the Crown extends well beyond the Queen s person 225 The Supreme Court found in the 1980 case Attorney General of Quebec v Labrecque that civil servants in Canada are not contracted by an abstraction called the state but rather they are employed by the monarch who enjoys a general capacity to contract in accordance with the rule of ordinary law 229 It is stated in the Rules amp Forms of the House of Commons of Canada that allegiance to the King means allegiance to the country 232 See Responsibilities and Note 1 at Cabinet of Canada a b c Though the royal family represents other countries abroad as directed by their respective cabinets and typically the governor general will undertake state visits and other foreign duties on behalf of the Queen of Canada 215 386 387 members of the royal family will also take part in Canadian events overseas 402 In 1970 Queen Elizabeth II the Duke of Edinburgh Prince Charles and Princess Anne undertook a tour of Northern Canada in part to demonstrate to an unconvinced American government and the Soviet Union that Canada had certain claim to its Arctic territories which were strategic during the Cold War 408 Former Minister of External Affairs Mitchell Sharp commented on a situation wherein Elizabeth II was in Latin America to promote British goods at the same time a Canadian ministerial trip to the same area was underway to promote Canadian products Sharp stated We couldn t ask Her Majesty to perform the function she was performing for Britain on that Latin American trip because the Queen is never recognized as Queen of Canada except when she is in Canada 415 The Queen s participation in Canadian events overseas contradicts Sharp s statement however n 3 n 18 Such events include Troopings of the Colour inspections of the troops and anniversaries of key battles whenever the sovereign or a member of his family is in Ottawa they lay a wreath at the National War Memorial Two Canadian citizens married into the royal family In 1988 Sylvana Jones nee Tomaselli in Placentia Newfoundland wed George Windsor Earl of St Andrews a great grandson of King George V and on 18 May 2008 Autumn Kelly originally from Montreal married Queen Elizabeth II s eldest grandson Peter Phillips 477 The latter couple has two children 14th and 15th in line to the throne who each hold dual Canadian and British citizenship 478 479 as do the three children of George Windsor though only the youngest Lady Amelia Windsor is in line to the throne currently 36th 480 More distantly Princes Boris and Hermann Friedrich of Leiningen great great great grandsons of Queen Victoria are also Canadian citizens As early as 1959 it was recognized that the then reigning Queen Eliabeth II was equally at home in all her realms 488 By the 1960s loyal societies in Canada recognized the Elizabeth s cousin Princess Alexandra the Honourable Lady Ogilvy as a Canadian princess 489 and at the time of the 2011 royal tour of Prince William Duke of Cambridge and Catherine Duchess of Cambridge both Michael Valpy writing for the CBC and The Globe and Mail referred to William as a prince of Canada 490 491 In 1919 Prince Edward Albert the future King Edward VIII asserted I want Canada to look upon me as a Canadian if not actually by birth yet certainly in mind and spirit 492 Princess Elizabeth Duchess of Edinburgh said in 1951 that when in Canada she was amongst fellow countrymen and 87 493 after acceding to the throne as Queen Elizabeth II she when departing the United States for Canada in 1983 stated to President Ronald Reagan I m going home to Canada tomorrow 494 In 2005 Elizabeth said she agreed with the statement earlier made by her mother Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother that Canada felt like a home away from home 495 in the same year she remarked I have always felt not only welcome but at home in Canada 381 Similarly the Queen said in 2010 in Nova Scotia it is very good to be home 496 Prince Edward Duke of Kent and Strathearn served as the Commander of British North American troops in Canada s Maritimes for nine years after 1791 mostly in Halifax 497 his granddaughter Princess Louise Marchioness of Lorne lived in Canada between 1878 and 1883 as viceregal consort 498 and her brother Prince Arthur Duke of Connaught and Strathearn resided in Canada first through 1870 as a member of the Canadian Militia defending Canada from the Fenian Raids 499 and then as governor general from 1911 until 1916 500 Later for six years beginning in 1940 Princess Alice Countess of Athlone a great grandchild of the Duke of Kent lived in Canada with her husband the Earl of Athlone himself a great grandchild of King George III 499 while he served as governor general 501 While the government houses are the King s official residences in Canada they are almost exclusively occupied by the sovereign s representative in each of those jurisdictions that have a government house or houses 156 517 For example when the Duke and Duchess of Sussex resided for a time on Vancouver Island as they were planning their future as members of the royal family the RCMP provided the couple s security However when the Sussexes decided to step down as senior members of the royal family the RCMP reassessed its provision of service In a briefing note to the then Minister of Public Safety Bill Blair the force noted the Sussex family s stay in Canada is of a private nature and to date there have been no official outings wherein the Duke and Duchess are representing the Queen There is no indication of either the Duke or Duchess participating in any official capacity for the Crown in Canada in the next two months Should this change however the RCMP will assess and provide security accordingly 547 Indigenous persons had already been appointed as lieutenant governors during Elizabeth s reign See Note 2 at Government of Canada Carleton University parliamentary expert Philippe Lagasse said you would need to have Indigenous peoples involved and consulted properly as well in particular since their treaty rights are understood to 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