Representatives in Canada refuse to perform the loyalty section of King Charles III

Representatives in Canada refuse to perform the loyalty section of King Charles III

A few newly elected Kuebec’s deputies who won the province elections on Wednesday refused the constitutionally mandated performance of King Charles III’s loyalty department.

In a letter broadcast on television, 11 deputies of the left -wing QUébec Solidaire party, or “solidarity,” the right of loyalty “to the Quebec people”, but they did not want to perform the other section that links them to the British monarchy, risking not to be allowed to occupy their seats in the National Assembly at the end of next November At a news conference, the party’s spokesman, Gabriel Nado Dubu, revealed that they worked with “full knowledge of the findings.”

“We ran a campaign to end the Bakibik era, and if we are elected to parliament, it will be to unlock windows,” he continued.
According to Canadian constitutional law, in order to hold office, a federal or local elected deputy must pledge his allegiance to the British sovereign. While the three elected politicians who proclaimed in its name that they would not perform the fidelity of the British king, the “Cubic Party” lawmakers are expected to perform on Friday.

The party head, Paul Saint-Pierre Plammondon, stated last week that he “cannot serve Sidin” due to “conflicts of interest” and that the property “costs 67 million Canadian dollars yearly, and this area is a reminder of colonial domination.”
In fact, abolishing ownership necessitates amending the constitution, which will take a lot of work and maybe years of political wrangling, as it requires unanimity from both Parliament and the ten Canadian provinces.

Representatives in Canada refuse to carry out King Charles III’s allegiance clause.

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