King Charles to visit Australia and Samoa on first overseas tour since cancer diagnosis

While he will undoubtedly be welcomed by fans waving the flag and singing God Save the King, Charles is also likely to hear antimonarchy voices in a country where 45 per cent of voters in a 1999 referendum supported creating an Australian republic.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese’s Labour Party supports ditching the monarchy, but the government says it is not a priority and there is “no timeline” for another referendum.

“It’s clear that there’s a real re-evaluation going on there as to whether the Commonwealth, and certainly the realms, want to retain their connection to the British monarchy or not,” Ed Owens, a historian and author of After Elizabeth: Can the Monarchy Save Itself? told Associated Press in an interview before the trip was announced. “So, you know, there are troubled waters ahead.”

The palace provided few details of the tour. Charles and Queen Camilla will visit the Australian Capital Territory and New South Wales as well as making a more formal state visit to Samoa, where the king will appear at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, the palace said.

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese. Photo: AAP / dpa

The capital territory is home to Canberra, Australia’s national capital. Sydney, Australia’s largest city, is in New South Wales.

Charles holds the symbolic title of head of the Commonwealth, a voluntary association of 56 independent nations, most of which have historic ties to Britain. The annual heads of government meeting will be held October 21-25.

However, the trip will not include a stop in New Zealand.

“The King’s doctors have advised that a further extension to Their Majesties’ trip should be avoided at this time, to prioritise His Majesty’s continued recovery,” the palace said in a statement.

Britain’s Kate, Princess of Wales and Princess Charlotte at the Wimbledon tennis championships in London on Sunday. Photo: Pool Photo via AP
The trip comes at a time when the health problems of Charles and Kate, the Princess of Wales, have highlighted the challenges faced by a slimmed-down royal family as the king pledges to cut costs.

With fewer working royals available to carry out the endless round of ribbon cuttings, awards ceremonies and state events that make up the life of a modern royal, the remaining family members have been forced to take on more events.

Charles’ cancer diagnosis occurred at the same time that the Princess of Wales – one of the most popular royals – underwent abdominal surgery and later announced she, too, had cancer. Prince William took time off to support his wife and their young family.
That left Queen Camilla, the king’s sister, Princess Anne, and his younger brother, Prince Edward, to shoulder the load. Princess Anne was briefly hospitalised last month after an accident thought to involve a horse left her with a concussion.