Any controversy reveals the shaky foundations of a hereditary monarchy. A wise ruler would set ‘minor royals’ free

Hereditary monarchy is always an accident waiting to happen. A wise monarch reduces the risk of accident. Britain’s Queen has been wise beyond endurance over her long reign in obeying the sole obligation of a non-political head of state, which is to avoid controversy. But she made one big mistake.

Back in 1969, the Queen gave in to pressure from her husband, Prince Philip, and her dynamic Australian press secretary, William Heseltine, to modernise the monarchy. The decision was made to validate hereditary monarchy as a “royal family”, and present it as such to the world. Cameras were invited into royal residences, to attend royal barbecues and see the teenage royals as “ordinary”. They would gradually take on a roll-call of public duties. Monarchy was to become a collective enterprise.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

MPs tell of families’ safety fears and police complacency

Parliamentarians share concerns over security as some reveal loved ones have begged…

Khan vows to set up ‘baby banks’ in every London borough if re-elected mayor

Charities will offer free childcare essentials such as nappies and bedding, says…

‘True explorers’: tributes paid to men killed in ‘catastrophic implosion’ of Titan sub

Families, friends and colleagues remember Stockton Rush, Hamish Harding, Shahzada and Suleman…

The Guardian view on Trump’s indictment: he’ll fight the law. Who will win? | Editorial

The former president faces far more serious allegations than paying hush money…