In 1940,
D. F. Malan, along with
J. B. M. Hertzog, founded the
Herenigde Nasionale Party (or "Reunited National Party") which pledged to fight for "a free independent republic, separated from the British Crown and Empire", and "to remove, step by step, all anomalies which hamper the fullest expression of our national freedom". In 1942, details of a draft republican constitution were published in Afrikaans-language newspapers
Die Burger and
Die Transvaler, which provided for a State President, elected by white citizens known as
Burgers only, who would be "only responsible to God... for his deeds in the fulfilment of his duties". On the matter of continued Commonwealth membership, the view of
Afrikaner Broederbond was that "departure from the Commonwealth as soon as possible remains a cardinal aspect of our republican aim". In 1948, the
National Party, now led by
D. F. Malan, came to power, although it did not campaign for a republic during the
election, instead favouring remaining in the Commonwealth, thereby appealing to Afrikaners who otherwise might have voted for the
United Party of
Jan Smuts. Malan's successor as prime minister,
J. G. Strijdom, also downplayed the republic issue, stating that no steps would be taken towards that end before 1958. Strijdom stated that the matter of whether South Africa would be a republic inside or outside the Commonwealth would be decided "with a view to circumstances then prevailing". Like his precessor, Strijdom declared the party's belief that a republic could only be proclaimed on the basis "of the broad will of the people".
Referendum and abolition On becoming prime minister in 1958,
Hendrik Verwoerd gave a speech to Parliament in which he declared: "We stand unequivocally and clearly for the establishment of the republic in the correct manner and at the appropriate time". In 1960, Verwoerd announced plans to hold a
whites-only referendum on the establishment of a republic, with a bill to that effect being introduced in Parliament on 23 April of that year. The Referendum Act received assent on 3 June 1960. In hopes of winning the support of those opposed to a republic, not only English-speaking whites but Afrikaners still supporting the United Party, Verwoerd proposed that constitutional changes would be minimal, with the Queen simply being replaced as head of state by a
State President, the office of which would be a ceremonial post rather than an executive one. In
Natal, the only province with an
English-speaking majority of whites, there was strong anti-republican sentiment; in 1955, the small Federal Party issued a pamphlet
The Case Against the Republic, while the Anti-Republican League organised public demonstrations. The League, founded by Arthur Selby, the Federal Party's chairman, launched the
Natal Covenant in opposition to the plans for a republic, signed by 33,000 Natalians. On the day of the referendum, the
Natal Witness, the province's daily English-language newspaper warned its readers that: "Not to vote against the Republic is to help those who would cut us loose from our moorings, and set us adrift in a treacherous and uncharted sea, at the very time that the winds of change are blowing up to hurricane force". The National Party government subsequently organised the referendum on 5 October 1960. The vote, which was restricted to
whites – the first such national election
in the Union – was narrowly approved by 52.29% of the voters. , last Governor-General and first
State President of South Africa The
Republic of South Africa was declared on 31 May 1961,
Queen Elizabeth II ceased to be
head of state, and the last
Governor General of the Union,
Charles R. Swart, took office as the first
State President.
Commonwealth membership Originally every independent country in the
Commonwealth was a
Dominion – sharing a monarch with the United Kingdom and the other dominions. The 1949
London Declaration prior to
India becoming a republic allowed countries with a different head of state to join or remain in the Commonwealth, but only by unanimous consent of the other members. The governments of
Pakistan (
in 1956) and, later,
Ghana (
in 1960) availed themselves of this principle, and the National Party had not ruled out South Africa's continued membership of the Commonwealth were there a vote in favour of a republic. However, the Commonwealth by 1960 included new
Asian and
African members, whose rulers saw the
apartheid state's membership as an affront to the organisation's new
democratic principles.
Julius Nyerere, then Chief Minister of
Tanganyika, indicated that his country, which was due to gain independence in 1961, would not join the Commonwealth were apartheid South Africa to remain a member. A
Commonwealth Prime Ministers' Conference was convened
in March 1961, a year ahead of schedule, to address the issue. In response, Verwoerd stirred up a confrontation, causing many members to threaten to withdraw if South Africa's renewal of membership application was accepted. As a result, South Africa's membership application was withdrawn, meaning that upon its becoming a republic on 31 May 1961, the country's Commonwealth membership simply lapsed. Following the end of apartheid, South Africa rejoined the Commonwealth in 1994, thirty-three years and one day the republic was established.
Contemporary views Leading up to the
wedding of Prince Harry and Meghan Markle in 2018, a survey by
Ipsos found that 35% of
South Africans believed that it would be worse for their country to have a
constitutional monarchy instead of an elected head of state while 24% believed that having a monarchy would make the country better. ==List of South African monarchs==