More worryingly for the
Queen and those close to her, these recent scandals have brought into ever
stronger focus the issue of what will become of the monarchy when she is no
longer at the helm.
Once a week for the past
few years, the Queen has met with her eldest son, Prince Charles, for a private
one-to-one briefing. Naturally, what is discussed in these meetings remains
strictly private, but royal insiders say the pair go over events of the past
seven days and make plans for upcoming royal engagements.
There is no doubt that the
93-year-old monarch has been handing more responsibility to her 71-year-old son
for some time. Since 2017, he has laid the nation’s wreath on her behalf at the
Cenotaph on Remembrance Day.
The Queen no longer
undertakes long-haul travel and instead, the heir to the throne represents her
on official visits overseas – including at the biennial Commonwealth heads of
government meeting.
But these one-to-ones
between mother and son represent more than just planning meetings. Royal
experts say the Queen is “very aware” that a transition is necessary. Some have
even suggested she may invoke a period of regency in which she will grant her
eldest son the full power to reign – a rumour that the Palace denies.
But in the twilight of her
67-year reign, Britain’s longest-serving monarch must have longed for a clean
handover. Unfortunately, events of recent months – including the Prince Andrew
and Jeffrey Epstein scandal, not to mention apparently increasing tension between
Princes William and Harry – make this seem unlikely.
Last month, Andrew was
forced to step down from public duties amid the scandal surrounding his
association with convicted sex offender Epstein.
Andrew’s subsequent,
disastrous News-night interview on the subject sealed his fate after he was
accused of lacking empathy for Epstein’s victims and failing to show regret
over his friendship with the disgraced financier.
He faces allegations, which
he denies, by Virginia Giuffre that he had sex with her when she was 17 and had
been trafficked by Epstein.
“This latest scandal
involving Andrew, which is not going to go away any time soon, is greatly
upsetting for the Queen and it’s also quite damaging for the institution of the
monarchy,” Joe Little, editor of Majesty magazine, tells Yahoo News UK.
“It’s not something she
would want to have associated with the royal family, so for them and for
Buckingham Palace it’s an uneasy time.”
At least for now, despite
her advancing years, the Queen appears to be in rude health and her management
skills remain undiminished. The speed and efficiency with which she acted to
remove Andrew from royal duties and calm the crisis he had created were as
impressive as ever. How she must feel being forced to take such drastic action
to protect the monarchy from potentially crippling reputation damage is
another matter.
“Charles may well trim down
the royals to just his immediate family. The Princess Royal works away in the
background pretty tirelessly but she will soon be 70 and will have to take her
foot off the accelerator. Most of the royal cousins such as the Duke and
Duchess of Gloucester and Duke of Kent are also elderly, so the family will be
trimmed naturally.”
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