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This episode explores Jamaica’s historic push to remove the British monarch as head of state and transition to a republic. It traces the journey from the 1962 independence settlement—where the British Crown remained at the top of Jamaica’s constitutional order—through decades of debate, stalled reforms, and rising calls for decolonisation.
The story then moves into the 2023–2024 turning point: the creation of the Constitutional Reform Committee, the release of its recommendations, and the introduction of the Republic Bill in Parliament. Viewers follow the political arguments, public concerns, and the high constitutional thresholds—two-thirds majorities and a national referendum—required for change.
The final chapter connects Jamaica’s movement to a wider Caribbean shift toward self-definition, highlighting Barbados’s republic transition and regional debates over reparations, symbolism, and sovereignty. The episode ends by noting that Jamaica’s referendum is still ahead, but the conversation itself has already reshaped national understanding of identity and constitutional power.
By history experts | Joe & Kevin3.3
44 ratings
This episode explores Jamaica’s historic push to remove the British monarch as head of state and transition to a republic. It traces the journey from the 1962 independence settlement—where the British Crown remained at the top of Jamaica’s constitutional order—through decades of debate, stalled reforms, and rising calls for decolonisation.
The story then moves into the 2023–2024 turning point: the creation of the Constitutional Reform Committee, the release of its recommendations, and the introduction of the Republic Bill in Parliament. Viewers follow the political arguments, public concerns, and the high constitutional thresholds—two-thirds majorities and a national referendum—required for change.
The final chapter connects Jamaica’s movement to a wider Caribbean shift toward self-definition, highlighting Barbados’s republic transition and regional debates over reparations, symbolism, and sovereignty. The episode ends by noting that Jamaica’s referendum is still ahead, but the conversation itself has already reshaped national understanding of identity and constitutional power.

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