Queen Elizabeth II’s death triggered a cascade of official protocols in Canada, shifting the constitutional monarchy to a new sovereign: King Charles III.

There have been a few hiccups and moments of confusion. Some new Canadians stumbled over which monarch to name when swearing their oaths of allegiance at the first citizenship ceremonies after the queen’s death. And in its haste to switch the lyrics of Canada’s royal anthem — now “God Save the King,” formerly “God Save the Queen” — the federal heritage department missed a few female pronouns in the last verse. (It has since been corrected.)

The king’s accession to the throne was proclaimed in Canada during a ceremony at Rideau Hall in Ottawa on Sept. 10. Protocol will dictate the activities to come, such as taking down Queen Elizabeth’s portrait in government buildings and adding King Charles’s image to Canadian money and documents.

Ahead of the queen’s funeral on Monday, here are some answers about what comes next for Canada.

Queen Elizabeth’s death may inspire more discussion about the relevance of the crown in Canada, but materially, it’s business as usual.

“The system didn’t change; regardless of the people — the celebrities — at the top, the basic system is still there, and it’s the same as it was last week,” said Jonathan Malloy, a political science professor at Carleton University in Ottawa.

While countries like Barbados cast off the queen as head of state, and Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern of New Zealand recently reaffirmed her support for her country to eventually become a republic, that conversation is not as far along in Canada.

[Read: With Queen Gone, Former Colonies Find a Moment to Rethink Lasting Ties]

Replacing the monarch with a Canadian head of state is complicated.

To do so would require amending Canada’s Constitution with the unanimous consent of the federal government and all 10 provinces, as my colleague Ian Austen wrote during the last royal visit — made by the king, who was then a prince, and Camilla, in May.

[Read Ian’s story: Most Canadians Don’t Want Charles as King, but Changing Royal Rule Isn’t Easy]

“The crown underlies our entire parliamentary, judicial and state system,” Mr. Malloy told me, adding that it wouldn’t be as simple as replacing the crown’s representative in Canada, the governor general, with a Canadian president, for example. The crown’s treaties with Indigenous people and Canada’s federalist system, which considers the provinces as an equal order of government to the federal government, would be affected.

Citizens for a Canadian Republic, one of the main groups pushing for this change, is not seizing on the queen’s death to argue for its ideas.

“There will be many occasions for making our case for a republic,” it said in a statement. “This is not one of them.”

During the last royal visit, I spoke to John Fraser, the founder and president of the Institute for the Study of the Crown in Canada.

At the time, he described a small minority of Canadians as “die-hard” fans of the royals and “romantic monarchists who see that the crown is like a golden thread woven through our history.”

Overwhelmingly, though, Canadians are indifferent to the institution and to the accession of King Charles, according to a recent poll.

“Support for the queen runs higher than support for the monarchy, because she was a remarkable person,” said Peter Loewen, director of the Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy at the University of Toronto.

He’s skeptical that King Charles can earn the same authority that his mother had in Canada, and said the accession of Queen Elizabeth’s less-liked son will not realistically lead to a meaningful push for Canada to amend its Constitution to become a republic.

“The costs of us changing our system of governance in a way that would effectively make us a republic are just so high, because they would involve opening up all sorts of issues that the country has tried to settle or ignore,” Mr. Loewen said. “We’ll kind of muddle through with Charles.”

The queen’s coffin will be moved to Westminster Abbey on Monday for her funeral after four days of lying in state at Westminster Hall, where thousands of visitors lined up for hours to pay their respects.

The funeral at Westminster Abbey will begin at 11 a.m. London time. Visit The Times’s website for more coverage throughout that day. In Canada, CBC said it would livestream the funeral.

[Read: A Detailed Rundown of Queen Elizabeth’s Funeral Day]

For federal workers, yes. Some provinces — British Columbia, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland and Labrador — are following suit with a provincial holiday, closing government offices and schools. Prince Edward Island will observe a one-time statutory holiday.

“For most Canadians, she was the only monarch we ever knew and many of us felt a deep affection and appreciation for her dedication to Canada,” Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said in a statement. He declared Monday a national day of mourning in Canada, after similar moves by Australia and New Zealand.

  • In Travel, Shayla Martin takes a journey through Black Nova Scotia and the 400-year history of African culture that shaped the maritime province.

  • North Atlantic right whales, a critically endangered species, often get entangled in the ropes used to fish for lobsters. Those concerns are prompting a seafood watchdog group to recommend that consumers stop eating lobster.

  • I looked at how Canada’s nursing shortage caused dozens of emergency rooms across the country to close temporarily.

  • The cartoonist Kate Beaton reflects on her time working in Alberta’s oil fields and discusses her new graphic memoir, “Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands.”


Vjosa Isai is a news assistant for The New York Times in Canada. Follow her on Twitter at @lavjosa.


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