ARM Media Statement - 2 November 1999
We have no beef with Charles - he just doesn't like Aussie meat
Australia's next King if we vote No on Saturday, Prince Charles,
will champion British producers over Aussie beef by promoting British
beef to restaurants, hoteliers and chefs in Europe as Britain's
new "beef ambassador."
A report in the London Times states that Prince Charles
will become an ambassador for British beef in Europe, which is one
of our key markets for Australian beef, and is including an active
program of British beef promotion on his calendar for next year.
The Australian Republican Movement said it is an intolerable situation
when our future Head of State, if we vote No on Saturday, is working
actively against Australian trade interests in one of our key markets.
We should have an Australian Head of State who puts us first,
and who puts Australian jobs and the welfare of Australian farming
families before those of any other country.
When overseas, our Head of State, the Queen, now promotes British
industry and products over Australian ones, even though she is our
Head of State. We also had Princess Anne, the Head of State's daughter
and the future King Charles III's sister, voting for Manchester
over Sydney for the 2000 Olympic bid.
We now have our future Head of State promoting British beef in
markets in which Australian beef producers are trying to sell their
own beef products.
We need an Australian Head of State, whose only allegiance is
to Australia and who will promote Australian products and Australian
industry - not a Head of State whose first allegiance rightly is
to her own country and its industries.
Former Deputy Prime Minister and National Party Leader Doug Anthony
said it is inappropriate that Australia's Head of State promotes
British interests before our own.
The former chairman of Austrade, Bill Ferris, has said it is also
a fact that Australia has a Head of State who promotes as a first
priority the trade interests of another country - her country, and
not ours.
Our Head of State cannot and does not promote our interests overseas.
Australia's Head of Sate should be an Australian - someone who puts
this nation before any other, and whose first allegiance is not
to another country, but to our own.
Authorised by Malcolm Turnbull,
Australian Republican Movement, 60 Park Street, Sydney NSW 2000
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