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

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

The constitution requires all newly elected Kuebec’s deputies to swear allegiance to King Charles III, President of Canada. However, several of the new lawmakers who won the province elections on Wednesday declined to do so.

In a letter broadcast on television, 11 deputies of the leftist party “Quebec Solidere” (the solidarity Quebec), the right of loyalty to the “Quebec People”, but they did not want to perform the other part that links them to the British monarchy, risking not to be allowed to occupy their seats in the National Assembly in The end of November.
At a news conference, party spokesman Gabriel Nado Dubu stated that the decision had been made with “full knowledge of the findings.”


“We ran our campaign to change a time in Quebec,” he continued, “and if we are elected to parliament, then we unlock windows.”
According to Canadian constitutional law, in order to hold office, a federal or local elected deputy must pledge his allegiance to the British sovereign.
The deputies of the “Cubic Party” are supposed to perform on Friday, and the three -elected politicians announced in his name that they will not perform the loyalty of the British king.

Paul Pierre Pierre Praymondon, the party’s head, mentioned “conflicts of interest” last week because he “cannot serve Sidin.”
He continued, saying that this area is “a symbol of colonial oppression” and that the property costs 67 million Canadian dollars yearly.
A number of well-known people denounced the production of a video that was uploaded on social media on Monday and required the deputies to uphold their duty to the British crown.

Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau reaffirmed that “there is no claybike” who wants to “examine the constitution” in response to a question concerning the monarchy.
In fact, abolishing ownership necessitates rewriting the constitution, which will take a significant amount of work and maybe years of political wrangling because it needs the unanimous support of both Parliament and the ten Canadian provinces.

But in a study taken in April of last year, a slim majority of Canadians declared for the first time that they wanted to terminate ownership, which is now mostly a source of pride. In Quebec, 71% of people support this proposition.
Author: AFP.

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

About Author

World