Bosi’s open letter to Governor General on Australia’s Constitutional crisis

Bosi’s open letter to Governor General on Australia’s Constitutional crisis
AustraliaOne leader Riccardo Bosi

AustraliaOne Party incorporated ARBN 653 445 188, Level 5, Nexus Building, 4 Columbia Court Baulkham Hills NSW 2153 Australia

AN OPEN LETTER TO HER EXCELLENCY THE HONOURABLE SAMANTHA JOY MOSTYN AC
28TH GOVERNOR-GENERAL OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF AUSTRALIA
Her Excellency the Honourable Ms Samantha Joy Mostyn AC
Governor-General of the Commonwealth of Australia
Government House
Dunrossil Drive
YARRALUMLA ACT 2600
Your Excellency,
Thank you for taking the time to read this, my most important communication.
My name is Riccardo Umberto Guerrino Bosi.
On the 19th of January 1978, at the age of 17 years, in a ceremony conducted at the Australian Army recruiting centre in Castlereagh Street, adjacent to Central railway station in Sydney NSW, I swore an oath of allegiance to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, Her heirs and successors according to law, as a member of the Australian Army, defending both Her Majesty and Her interests, that being the Commonwealth of Australia.
I swore to resist Her enemies and faithfully discharge my duty according to law, so help me God, and like many other brave and good Australians before me, did so.
I served 24 years and 7 months achieving the rank of Lieutenant Colonel in the Royal Australian Infantry Corps and I confirm that I have not revoked this oath, and for the time being, remain bound by that oath, and it is in accordance with my obligations to this oath, that brings me to the purpose of this letter.
Purpose
I write to you today due to my serious concerns with the apparent failure of you and former Governors-General to give effect to your responsibilities, as per Sections 62 and 68 of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia 1901, respectively:

  • to ensure Ministers of State and their administrators of departments of State, execute their roles and responsibilities as per Section 51 of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Australia 1901, for the ‘peace, order and good government of the Commonwealth’; and
  • to regulate, as the command-in-chief of the naval and military forces of the Commonwealth, all matters relating to the disposition and management of the federal forces with the advice of Ministers of State and their administrators of departments of State.
    Constitutional Crisis
    We Australians are in the midst of a constitutional crisis.
    There are countless regulations and mandates on the books that are blatantly unconstitutional and/or violate the law.
    This, however, is not the crisis, because bad law can easily be rewritten or repealed.
    No. The crisis is that you and your predecessors have consistently failed to ensure your respective Ministers of State and their appointed administrators of department of State rigorously adhered to the strictures of the Constitution.
    At this point, you might justifiably enquire as to the exact nature of these unconstitutional actions.
    There are many, however the two most egregious are; an unfit and dysfunctional electoral system and feeble and disabled naval and military forces:
  • An Unfit and Dysfunctional Electoral System. Your Ministers of State and their appointed administrators of departments of State have failed in their duty to maintain an ‘impartial and independent electoral system for eligible voters through active electoral roll management, efficient delivery of polling services and targeted education and public awareness programs’.
  • Feeble and Disabled Naval and Military Forces. Your Ministers of State and their appointed administrators of departments of State have failed in their duty to ensure that their advice to you achieves Australia’s naval and military forces ‘primary role to defend Australia and its national interests, promote security and stability, and support the Australian community’.
    Your Duty and Your Responsibility
    It is by my authority as one who swore an oath to defend Her Majesty, Her heirs and successors and Her interests, that I remind you of the prerogative of the Monarch, that is the executive and reserve powers which are vested and survive in the role of Governor-General and in you as the Monarch’s representative.
    You had not been appointed to your current position when the constitutional crisis began, but the duty and the responsibility to remedy these catastrophic circumstances has now fallen to you. It is yours and yours alone.
    Prerogative Powers
    Your powers and duties as Governor-General are described in the Constitution, by the Letters Patent and your Commission, by Acts of the Commonwealth Parliament, by conventions established in past centuries in Great Britain or by practices and customs that have developed in Australia.
    These can be divided into three categories; prerogative, legislative and executive.
    Parliamentary government has well established the principle that the Monarch can perform no executive act except on the advice of some minister responsible for parliament.
    You act on advice, whether you are acting in your own name, or as Governor-General-in-Council. You have the responsibility to weigh and evaluate their advice, but you are under no compulsion to accept it unquestioningly.
    However, the Australian Constitution firmly places the prerogative powers of the Monarch into your hands as Governor-General and other powers in your hands as Governor-General-in-Council.
    These prerogative powers are those where you are required to act on your own and they are not ‘redundant or superfluous in modern times’ as is claimed by some.
    It must always be remembered that conventions and practices do not supersede constitutional law.
    The Confidence of the People
    Following the lead of the then Prime Minister Andrew Fisher in a 1909 Cabinet minute to the Governor-General, outlining the seven circumstances under which a dissolution of parliament may properly be had, the case could be made to add an eighth to his list, to wit: “When there is good reason to believe that the people earnestly desire that the policy of the Government shall not be given effect to”.
    70 years later, Australia’s 17th Governor-General, Sir Paul Hasluck described the duties of the Governor-General, hinting, whether intentionally or unintentionally, that perhaps there existed a more than just a passing Vice Regal duty to consider the will of the people.
    “To ensure that those who conduct the affairs of the nation do so strictly in accordance with the Constitution and the laws of the Commonwealth and with due regard to the public interest”.
    3
    The People Have Lost Confidence
    The people have lost confidence in the Ministers of State, and the administrators of the departments of State due to their malfeasance, their maladministration, their blatant failure of responsible management and governance, and even their failure to obey their own departmental rules and regulations.
    I am speaking to you now as your equal under the same oath that we both swore.
    I, indeed all of us who swore the same oath to resist Her enemies and faithfully discharge our duty according to law, so help me God, are under the same obligations as you.
    The case can be made that you and your predecessors have allowed the failures of Ministers of State and the administrators of the departments of State, to destroy the capability of the naval and military forces of Australia to defend the Monarch and Her interests, being the Commonwealth of Australia now and in perpetuity.
    Additionally, the case can also be made that the Ministers of State appointed by you and your predecessors have undermined the Monarchs’ ability to defend Their Royal Highnesses’ interests.
    This is treason. And those whose silence aids and abets this action are also guilty of treason, or its lesser charge of treachery.
    The Appeal
    On behalf of the citizens of the Commonwealth of Australia, I appeal to you as Governor-General and Head of the Executive Government, for remedy for the people for the malfeasance and maladministration by Ministers of State and their appointed administrators of departments of State.
    Specifically,
  • I appeal to you to appoint a Federal Executive Council for a period of no longer than three months in accordance with Section 51 of the Constitution, with the sole purpose of rehabilitating the electoral process in its entirety prior to the upcoming election in order to ensure ‘responsible management and governance’ of the Commonwealth of Australia of the Monarch.
  • I appeal to you to direct the cessation of all actions with respect to all vaccines in accordance with Section 51(xxiiiA) of the Constitution until their safety, efficacy and necessity are all confirmed, in order to ensure the well-being and health of Australia’s current and future naval and military forces.
    In Conclusion
    My intention is clear. We are in a constitutional crisis and have been for some time; it is now in your hands to take action. Failing to do so would be an act of treason.
    You face one small problem; any advice you accept from any jurist who has taken an oath that supersedes the oath to Queen Elizabeth the Second, Her heirs and successors according to law, so help me God, is null and void.
    Your Excellency, you’re on your own.
    Riccardo Bosi
    Lieutenant Colonel Rtd
    National Leader
    AUSTRALIAONE
    16 April 2025

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