‘You Are Not Our King,’ Australian Lawmaker Shouts at King Charles in Shocking Moment During Royal Tour

Mar. 15, 2025

King Charlesfaced shouts of “You are not my King, this is not your land" from a lawmaker in Australia duringhis official visit.

Charles, 75, had just sat down after making his speech to the Australian Parliament in Canberra on Monday Oct. 21, when a senator was heard calling from the back of the chamber.

“You destroyed our land, give us a treaty — we want a treaty, we want a treaty with this country.”

Then, as she was being escorted out of the Great Hall of Parliament House, she kept calling out, “This is not your land, This is not your land. You are not my King, you are not our King.”

Thorpe is a longtime campaigner for a treaty between Australia and its first inhabitants, theBBCreported.

Politician Lidia Thorpe; King Charles.Victoria Jones/Shutterstock; Lukas Coch-Pool/Getty

King Charles is heckled by Australian politician Senator Lidia Thorpe shouting before she was escorted away by security King Charles III and Queen Camilla attend Australian Parliament House for Ceremonial Welcome and Parliamentary Reception

Victoria Jones/Shutterstock; Lukas Coch-Pool/Getty

But a palace source pointed to the crowds who greeted them, saying the couple was “deeply grateful to the very many thousands who turned out to support them, and are only sorry they didn’t have a chance to stop and talk to every single one. The warmth and scale of the reception was truly awesome.”

In his speech made minutes before the interruption, Charles had praised the First Nations people, thanked them for their welcome and paid respects to “the traditional owners of the lands on which we meet,”The Telegraphreported.

Lidia Thorpe at the Parliament building in Canberra on Oct. 21, 2024.Lukas Coch-Pool/Getty

Australian Senator Lidia Thorpe disrupts proceedings as Britain’s King Charles III and Queen Camilla attend a Parliamentary reception at Parliament House in Canberra

Lukas Coch-Pool/Getty

“In my many visits to Australia, I have witnessed the courage and hope that have guided the nation’s long and sometimes difficult journey towards reconciliation," he said.

The protest came as observers have been focusing on what reaction there will be in Australia to seeing the country’s head of state — a position he inherited after the death of his mother Queen Elizabeth on Sept. 8, 2022.

King Charles delivering his speech to Parliament in Canberra on Oct. 21, 2024.Lukas Coch-Pool/Getty

King Charles III delivers a speech while attending a Parliamentary reception hosted by Prime Minister of Australia Anthony Albanese and Jodie Haydon on October 21, 2024 in Canberra, Australia

A republican movement hasreportedly asked to meetthe King during the visit. Charles has reaffirmed the longstanding position of the monarchy, reinforcing that he is relaxed about any change in status and constitution. It is up to the people of any of the states that have him as King to make that decision,his aides have said.

Queen Camilla and King Charles at the ceremonial welcome at Australia’s Parliament House, Canberra, on Oct. 21, 2024.Victoria Jones - Pool/Getty

Queen Camilla and King Charles III attend the ceremonial welcome and Parliamentary reception at the Australian Parliament House on October 21, 2024, in Canberra, Australia

Victoria Jones - Pool/Getty

In fact, a recent poll shows support for a republic has waned. ASydney Sunday Telegraphpoll, quoted inThe Timeson Oct. 13, found that those favoring a republic was now at 33%, down from the 39.4% figure at the last referendum on the issue in 1999.

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Senator Lidia Thorpe being ushered out of the assembly on Oct. 21, 2024.Victoria Jones/Shutterstock

King Charles is heckled by Australian politician Senator Lidia Thorpe shouting before she was escorted away by security King Charles III and Queen Camilla attend Australian Parliament House for Ceremonial Welcome and Parliamentary Receptio

Victoria Jones/Shutterstock

Ahead of the disruption in Parliament, Charles and Queen Camilla, 77, had been welcomed to the Parliament building with the sounds of a didgeridoo.

The King, a longtime campaigner on climate change, also visited CSIRO, the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation, to talk to firefighters about combating the bush fires which devastate millions of hectares of Australian land each year.

source: people.com