I have always been a monarchist.  I am however questioning my own beliefs.
 
Parliament of Canada should have been able to speak but the PM ran to the crown, hid behind the "skirt" of the crown and cried.  "They are not playing fair, I want to take my ball and go home."  The crown looked down and said, "Yes, go home come back another day"
 
I don't know...did Her Excellency the Right Honourable Michaëlle Jean, Governor General and Commander-in-Chief of Canada drop the ball?
 
Should the future of Canada be placed in the hands of one person "representing" the Queen.  Should the crown have any say in the affairs of Canada?
 
I am now at a cross road, far more deeper than the Conservative (Reform), Liberal, NDP, Bloc Québécois question.
 
 
......... From Wikipedia................
Canadian national unity
While never speaking directly against 
Quebec separatism, Elizabeth did publicly praise Canada's unity and expressed her wish to see the continuation of a unified Canada, sometimes courting controversy over the matter. In a speech to the 
Quebec Legislature in 1964, while the 
Quiet Revolution was ongoing, she ignored the national controversy (and the 
riots during her appearance in 
Quebec City) in favour of praising Canada's two "complementary cultures," speaking, in both 
French and 
English, about the strength of Canada's two founding peoples, stating: "I am pleased to think there exists in our Commonwealth a country where I can express myself officially in French," and, "whenever you sing [the French words of] "
O Canada" you are reminded that you come of a proud race."
[14][75] Later, after she proclaimed the 
Constitution Act in 1982, which was the first time in Canadian history that a major constitutional change had been made without the agreement of the 
government of Quebec,[
citation needed] Elizabeth attempted to demonstrate her position as head of the whole Canadian nation, and her role as conciliator, by privately expressing to journalists at a reception at 
Rideau Hall her regret that Quebec had not been a part of the settlement.
[14]
In 1995, during a Quebec separatist referendum campaign, the Queen was tricked into revealing her more personal opinions on Quebec secession when 
Pierre Brassard, a DJ for Radio 
CKOI-FM Montreal, telephoned Buckingham Palace pretending to be then Canadian Prime Minister 
Jean Chrétien, and kept a convinced Queen Elizabeth in a fourteen minute conversation that vacillated between French and English. When told that the separatists were showing a lead in the polls, Elizabeth revealed that she felt the "referendum may go the wrong way," adding, "if I can help in any way, I will be happy to do so." However, she pointedly refused to accept the advice, from the man whom she believed to be Chrétien, that she intervene in the referendum without first seeing a draft speech sent by the 
Prime Minister's Office. The Queen eventually began to have suspicions about the person to whom she was speaking and ended the conversation, though her tactful handling of the call won plaudits from Brassard.
[76] Chrétien later, in his memoirs, recounted the Queen's 
tongue-in-cheek comments to him regarding this affair: "'I didn't think you sounded quite like yourself,' she told me, 'but I thought, given all the duress you were under, you might have been drunk.'"
[77]