Australian commercial media has a vested interest in royal weddings, that is plain for all to see. They see it as an opportunity to sell copies, advertising, souvenir editions and commemorative tea towels, mugs and teaspoons. They very much want Australians to follow them in their delight about next year’s Christmas in August.
Republicans think most people — a clear majority — in Australia have moved on from the 1950s and that the correct line for us to take is to be respectful and honest — not disingenuously claim we are overcome with excitement about the event. Of course, it makes sense for republicans to use the media attention to present the case for a republic and point out how remote the events are to Australia.
In the present instance, the events involve two English persons who not only have no constitutional role in Australia, but who are quite likely to never have one, since William may never inherit the Australian throne.
This is exactly the line the ARM took yesterday in its statement, and by the sound of the vox pops and polls, most Australians regard the news of the engagement of two people who had been going out together for 10 years as rather an anti-climax. In fact, there was a sense of mystification in the public that shows were cancelled and bulletins were held over to breathlessly report this news as if it wasn’t something we hadn’t all been expecting for several years.
The New Zealand Republican Movement even prepared a video to catalogue the bemused and laconic reaction from New Zealanders.
The Republican Movement received a curious warning in the form of an editorial in The Australian last night, which informed republicans that they had better follow the party line and and “rejoice” about the royal engagement or face the consequences:
“General Keating claimed the engagement is “pretty irrelevant to Australia” because “it’s quintessentially an English moment”. His argument might resonate in Newtown, New Farm and Richmond, but it will be poorly received in the outer suburbs and provincial centres where middle Australia will follow the details of the engagement in print and online, just as it sent newspaper circulations to stellar heights after the death of Diana on August 31, 1997.”
The editorial then proceeded to accuse the Republican Movement of being anti-British in sentiment.
First, we accept that we should be respectful and congratulate the royals. We have done this in all our public statements. We have, in fact, no gripe at all with the royals, and the ARM is — believe it or not, very pro-British — and very much into celebrating our British heritage and institutions. Speaking personally, I am exceptionally fond of Britain as my grandmother was English and I lived in England for six years. You only need to look at our policy to see that we applaud Britain and what it has contributed to Australia:
“An Australian republic will embrace our egalitarianism and the concept of a fair go. It will acknowledge our Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander heritage and respect its culture, with its timeless connection to the Australian land and sea. It will recognise and build upon our British heritage and acknowledge its gifts, including our political and legal institutions. An Australian republic will celebrate our immigrant heritage of opportunity and endeavour and its contribution to our national identity. It will unite all Australians behind an Australian head of state.”
Secondly, we don’t accept that there is a class divide in egalitarian Australia between inner and outer suburbs in support for the monarchy. We think this attitude, to be frank, is rather disrespectful towards the Australian people and their aspirations. The Republican Movement is not elitist in any sense. This is shown in a membership base that covers every part of Australia and contains every sort of Australian.
Newspaper circulation is mentioned prominently in the quote and this is likely to be the primary concern of The Australian — a commercial media entity. (There is nothing wrong with that, of course.)
Unfortunately for The Australian, it seems to have an outdated presumption about the public mood that is not supported by its own polling. An online poll of 1200 people in The Australian yesterday showed that 50% of people supported a republic with 40.67% being republicans no matter what the royals get up to. On the other hand, only 29.92% support the monarchy come hell or high water.
There’s 9.33% that don’t care either way, but the interesting figure was the number of people turned off by the event and its subsequent reporting. Only 10.75% were more favourable towards the monarchy as a result of the over-the-top press coverage, however 9.33% of people were actually turned off the monarchy by the so-called “hype” about of the event.
In other words, the meagre minority of people interested in the royal engagement was about the same those turned off the by saturation reporting of this event by newspapers such as The Australian.
Perhaps instead of criticising the Republican Movement, the paper might instead prudently consider its own interests and how they are affected by the balance in its reporting. As newspaper circulations drop away alarmingly with the advent of competing sources of news and information, all newspapers that do not give people the news that appeals to them run the real risk of losing segments of their readership.
In the case of the royal wedding, at least 50% of the Australian public will be turned off if media entities injudiciously force-feed Australians a bland diet of unimportant British royal-watching that is, let’s face it, far better found in Woman’s Day than in credible broadsheets that purport to report the real news that truly effects Australians. Bear in mind that Ireland is in the midst of a sovereign debt crisis that may have massive implications for the world economy and thereby the livelihoods of Australians.
There is no doubt that the media should properly report this event involving a major worldwide celebrity, since it seems important to many people all around the world, even republican United States.
However, it does not deserve to be reported more importantly than the disturbing developments with Ireland and its sovereign debt crisis, something that runs the risk of spiralling Europe and the world into a double-dip recession. These are the events in Europe that will truly affect Australian people and families in the future — their livelihoods, jobs, mortgages and houses. Surely this is far more important than the pomp and circumstance of a British royal wedding from two people with no genuine connection to Australia.
It was amusing to watch ch7 recently which appeared to have the royal wedding at about 4th story. Secret republicans?
Also methinks the splash by Planet’s sister, Miranda, might need to be wound back lauding Charles’ eldest. One detects a thoroughly modern William with a genuine concern for people and the environment just like Charles.
I can’t help thinking the timing after such a long partnership was a very deliberate morale boost for the suffering Brits in the very real GFC at least for them. A patriotic gesture, and sincere enough.
Not particularly relevant to Australia, except for the global citizen bit on climate, which is bipartisan in the wet Isles, all too aware of a flooded country in a storm.
I try to ignore the trivia and concentrate on the important stuff. For example, I am worried that Prince William’s hair seems to be going the same way as his father’s.
Is a balding potential monarch really good enough in this day and age?
There are many young men who have a wonderfully full head of hair and also have excellent follicular genetics. Wouldn’t we rather have one of them as a future monarch? It would be easier on the eyes as we browse the newsagents magazine racks.
TomMcL – not a few of the suffering citizens of Blighty have made the same point, distraction anyone?
And the rilly, rilly bizarre thing is that, in the ould Sod, Eire, drowning in the lies and rampant swindling of its political class (the erstwhile Taoiseach [PM] Bertie Ahern was given a free pass at an enquirybecause he couldn’t recall if a particular brown envelope contained 30K or 40K…, the wheelbarrows and dumptrucks weren’t queried), the wedding thrill and blather is just as distracting.
1916 and earlier, spin in your graves.