This is King Charles III’s speech on Commonwealth Day 2026: “a family that is united by shared values of justice”

Sebastian Ramirez

The British Crown is currently under the eye of global scrutiny after Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s arrest and connections with the late sex offender, Jeffrey Epstein. That’s why everyone was listening to what King Charles III had to say during the most important day in the United Kingdom, the Commonwealth Day 2026:

The King has emphasized that there are several challenges the world will have to face, including the increasing pressures of conflict between nations. However, he believes the Commonwealth of Nations has embraced an extraordinary diversity of faith, democracy, language, and most importantly, faith. The Monarch of the United Kingdom thinks of the Commonwealth as a family that is united by shared values of justice, democracy, opportunity, compassion, and mutual respect.

The King is ready to address the uncomfortable situations in his speech

Read the full speech below:

We join together on this Commonwealth Day at a time of great challenge and great possibility. Across our world, communities and nations face the increasing pressures of conflict, climate change and rapid transformation. Yet it is often in such testing moments that the enduring spirit of the Commonwealth is most clearly revealed.

Ours is a remarkable association that spans every ocean and continent. Embracing an extraordinary diversity of culture, language and faith, our Commonwealth family is united by shared values of justice, democracy, opportunity, compassion and mutual respect. In a world that can feel increasingly fragmented, this voluntary union of free association remains rare and precious – a forum for open and honest discussion and debate to help improve the lives of the nearly three billion people who call our member states home.

Our Commonwealth of Nations holds untapped potential for prosperous trade between trusting partners. With nearly two-thirds of our population under the age of thirty, we are a family defined by youth and possibility. It is our shared responsibility to ensure that they inherit not only hope and ambition, but also a world in which they can flourish.

That inheritance depends upon the health of our planet and on the restoration of the natural world on which we depend. Across so many parts of our Commonwealth, climate change is not an abstract or distant threat, but a lived reality. The stewardship of nature, the protection of oceans and forests, and the pursuit of prosperity secured in harmony with the natural world are duties we owe not only to one another, but to generations yet unborn.

As we look ahead to the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Antigua and Barbuda later this year, we are reminded that the great gatherings of our nations are strengthened by the daily endeavours of their people. What distinguishes the Commonwealth is not only what our governments resolve together, but what our people do each day in countless acts of service, enterprise and creativity. When leaders meet, they do so on behalf of millions whose quiet determination, resilience and generosity give true meaning to our shared endeavour.

Working together, we can ensure that the Commonwealth continues to stand as a force for good – grounded in community, committed to the kind of restorative sustainability that has a return on investment, enriched by culture, steadfast in its care for our planet, and united in friendship and in the service of its people.

 

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