Monarchists' glee as King, Queen prepare to touch down

Luke Costin and Aaron BunchAAP
Camera IconKing Charles and Queen Camilla are making their first trip to Australia since the coronation. (AP PHOTO) Credit: AAP

King Charles and Queen Camilla will shortly arrive in Australia, kicking off a delicately planned, rapid royal tour as the monarch battles cancer.

The trip is the couple's first Australian visit since the King ascended to the throne in 2022 and the first by a reigning monarch since Queen Elizabeth's 2011 tour.

But unlike that extensive 10-day trip by his mother, engagements and travel have been pared back considerably in light of the King's cancer diagnosis in February.

Still, the royals will be kept busy with formal dinners, wreath laying, fleet inspecting and hand-shaking during their five-day tour of Sydney and Canberra.

Members of the public will have multiple chances to glimpse Australia's new monarch at iconic sites including the Australian War Memorial, federal parliament and the Sydney Opera House.

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The Opera House sails are also due to be lit up for the couple's arrival at Sydney Airport on Friday night before the royal couple take Saturday to recover from their 24-hour journey.

The Australian Monarchist League's Damien De Pyle said it would be a privilege for the nation to welcome the King back to Australia.

"It's obviously a very special country for him ... this is the first Commonwealth country he's visited since becoming King," Mr De Pyle told AAP.

Official duties begin on Sunday, including a church service and a visit from Governor-General Sam Mostyn and NSW Governor Margaret Beazley.

But speculation is building that Royal Randwick could live up to its name and be graced with a discreet appearance from the couple on Saturday for the world's richest horse race outside the United Arab Emirates, the $20 million Everest.

The pair will travel to Canberra on Monday, where they will lay a wreath at the Australian War Memorial before receiving an official welcome at Parliament House.

The royals will also meet with Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Opposition Leader Peter Dutton, plant a tree, and tour the botanic gardens.

Fans will be able to see the pair about midday at the For Our Country memorial, which commemorates the military service of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders.

Sydneysiders will be able to see the King and Queen at the Opera House on Tuesday about 4.30pm.

Australian Monarchist League volunteers plan to hand out flags at the Opera House, while a small group of UK republicans plan to protest in Sydney and Canberra.

"Some media love to portray monarchists as collectors of tea towels, cups and saucers," the league's national chair Philip Benwell said.

"The (league) is not about that but about the serious business of defending the Australian Constitution and Crown."

Forty per cent of Australians don't know the British monarch is also Australia's head of state, according to research commissioned by the Australian Republican Movement.

Mr Albanese floated a possible referendum for Australia to become a republic if his government was returned for a second term.

But the idea was shelved after the failed 2023 referendum to establish an Indigenous voice to federal parliament.

The royal couple will also visit the National Centre of Indigenous Excellence in Redfern and attend a community barbecue in Parramatta, before embarking on a review of the Royal Australian Navy fleet.

The King and Queen depart Australia on Wednesday morning for Samoa, where they will open the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.

King Charles, who has paused cancer treatment during his travels, travelled to Australia 15 times before ascending to the throne.

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