From Reuters:
“Charles III, Britain's
conflicted new monarch”
With the death of his mother
Queen Elizabeth on Thursday, Prince Charles has finally become king of the
United Kingdom and 14 other realms, ending a wait of more than 70 years - the longest
by an heir in British history. The role will be daunting. His late mother was
overwhelmingly popular and respected, but she leaves a royal family that has
seen reputations tarnished and relationships strained, including over lingering
allegations of racism against Buckingham Palace officials. Charles confronts
those challenges at the age of 73, the oldest monarch to take the throne in a
lineage that dates back 1,000 years, with his second wife Camilla, who still
divides public opinion, by his side.
To detractors, the new king is
weak, vain, interfering, and ill-equipped for the role of sovereign. He has
been ridiculed for talking to plants and obsessing over architecture and the
environment, and will long be associated with his failed first marriage to the
late Princess Diana. Supporters say that is a distortion of the good work he
does, that he is simply misunderstood and that in areas such as climate change
he has been ahead of his time. They argue he is thoughtful and concerned about
his fellow Britons from all communities and walks of life. His Prince's Trust
charity has helped more than one million unemployed and disadvantaged young
people since its launch almost 50 years ago. "The trouble is you are in a
no-win situation. If you do absolutely nothing at all ... they are going to
complain about that," Charles once told a TV documentary. "If you try
and get stuck in, do something to help, they also complain."
Throughout his life, Charles has
been caught between a modernising monarchy, trying to find its place in a
fast-changing and more egalitarian society, while maintaining traditions that
give the institution its allure. That tension can be seen through the lives of
his own sons. The eldest, William, 40, now the heir himself, leads a life of
traditional duty, charity work and military pageantry. Younger son Harry, 37,
resides outside Los Angeles with his American ex-actress wife Meghan and
family, forging a new career more in keeping with Hollywood than Buckingham
Palace. The brothers, once very close, are now barely on speaking terms.
UPBRINGING Groomed from
birth to be king one day, Charles Philip Arthur George was born at Buckingham
Palace on Nov. 14, 1948, in the 12th year of the reign of his grandfather, King
George VI. Just 3 when he became heir apparent after his mother became
queen in 1952, Charles's upbringing was always different from previous future
monarchs. Unlike predecessors educated by private tutors, Charles went
to Hill House school in West London before becoming a boarder at Cheam School
in Berkshire, which was attended by his father Prince Philip and where he was
later head boy. He was then sent to Gordonstoun, a tough boarding school
in Scotland where Philip had also studied. He described his time there as hell:
he was lonely and bullied. "A prison sentence," he reportedly said.
"Colditz with kilts." Breaking with tradition again, he went
to Trinity College, Cambridge, to study archaeology and physical and social
anthropology but later changed to history. During his studies he was
formally crowned Prince of Wales, the title traditionally held by the heir to
the throne, at a grand ceremony in 1969, having spent nine weeks at a Welsh
university where he said he faced almost daily protests from nationalists. The
following year he became the first British heir to receive a degree. Like
many royals before him, he joined the armed forces, initially with the Royal
Air Force in 1971 and later with the Navy, rising through the ranks to command
the minesweeper HMS Bronington, before ending active service in 1976. As
a young prince, he cut a dashing, sporty figure who loved skiing, surfing, and
scuba diving. He was a keen polo player and also rode as a jockey in a number
of competitive races. In 1979, his great-uncle Lord Mountbatten, who he
described as "the grandfather I never had", was killed in an Irish
Republican Army (IRA) bombing, a loss that deeply affected him. "It
seemed as if the foundation of all that we held dear in life had been torn
apart irreparably," he later said. On leaving the Navy in 1976 he
searched for a role in public life as there was no clear constitutional job for
the heir, saying he had to "make it up as you go along". "That's
what makes it so interesting, challenging and of course complicated," he
said of his role in a documentary to mark his 70th birthday.
DIANA However, for many in
Britain and beyond, Charles will always be associated with his doomed marriage
to Lady Diana Spencer and his affair with Camilla Parker Bowles, the love of
his life. When he and Diana wed in 1981 in front of a global television audience
of some 750 million people, his bride seemed the perfect choice. All
initially seemed well, and sons William and Harry were born in 1982 and 1984
respectively. But behind the scenes, the marriage had problems and Diana blamed
Camilla for its eventual breakdown in 1992, famously saying in a TV interview:
"there were three of us in this marriage". Charles said he had
remained faithful "until it (the marriage) became irretrievably broken
down". The couple divorced in 1996. When Diana was killed in a
Paris car crash in 1997 there were vitriolic outpourings in the press against
him and Camilla, and his public popularity sank. In the decades since,
his standing has improved, even if he remained less popular than his mother. In
2005 he finally married Camilla, who has emerged into the public spotlight to
win greater acceptance and praise for her easy going style. However, the
shadow of Diana remains, and her life continues to enthrall the public. In
recent years, she has been the subject of a major film and Broadway musical,
while the couple's relationship was at the centre of hit Netflix drama
"The Crown".
MEDIA CONTEMPT With
tabloids poring over his relationships, it is unsurprising that his dealings
with the media have often been testy and he has made no secret of his contempt
for the paparazzi. "I'm not very good at being a performing monkey
really. I think I am quite a private person. I'm not prepared to just sort of
perform whenever they want me to perform," he said in 1994. At a
photo call on a skiing holiday in 2005 he was overheard calling the media
"bloody people", and saying of BBC's royal correspondent: "I
can't bear that man. He's so awful." While the media wanted to
focus on his private life, Charles wanted to speak out about social and
spiritual issues, and has never shied from airing his views on matters close to
his heart. But by actions such as founding the Duchy Originals brand to
promote organic food, and saying he talked to his plants and shook hands with
trees when he planted them, some media labelled him a crank who would rather be
a farmer than a prince. He has also been criticised for forthright views
on architecture, once calling a planned modernist extension to London's
National Gallery a "carbuncle", and accused of "quackery"
for his advocacy of alternative medicines. Biographer Tom Bower said the
prince was committed to issues such as the environment, but was stubborn and
unable to take criticism himself. "He's a person who is driven, who
undoubtedly wants to do good but doesn't understand that the consequences of a
lot of his actions cause a lot of trouble," Bower said. The
criticism has eased in recent years with newspapers instead turning their ire
on his son Harry, but it has not gone away. Media reported in June that he had
been involved in a spat with the government over its policy on sending asylum
seekers to Rwanda - something the prince was said to have called
"appalling", leading to criticism from ministers and newspapers. "If
he's not very careful, those disagreeing with his provocative political
interventions may also conclude Britain's constitutional monarchy is no longer
worth keeping," the Daily Mail said in its editorial.
CONCERN FOR PEOPLE Supporters
say this shows the new king is a serious-minded man with a genuine concern for
his people. To some he has an impossible role - either accused of
political interference if he takes an interest in social issues or risking
being labeled a pampered, cosseted prince. "Why do you think I've
done all this for all these years?" he said in a 2021 TV interview about
climate change. "Because I minded about, and always have done, the next
generation." In his diaries, Chris Mullin, a former left-wing
Labour Party lawmaker, recalled a visit to Charles's Clarence House home where
the then-prince spoke to assembled politicians about his charities. "Their
range is vast, but always he comes back to the same point: the young,
especially the disaffected, the unlucky and even the malign," Mullin
wrote. "I confess I am impressed. He could fritter away his life on
idleness and self-indulgence." In the 1970s, with Britain's economy
in dire straits, he used his 7,400 pounds Navy severance pay to fund community
initiatives. Later, with cities torn by riots and rising unemployment, his
Prince's Trust began helping disadvantaged young people start their own
businesses. "I would have been a blinding idiot if I hadn't paid
some attention to this sort of thing. I remember thinking I'm sure there's
something I can do to help," he said. Of his greatest campaigning
cause - the environment - he can now take solace that global leaders have come
round to his demands that they address a climate change crisis. At the
COP26 United Nations conference held in Britain in 2021, U.S. President Joe
Biden praised Charles' leadership, telling him that he got "the whole
thing going". Charles' son William said: "He's had a really
rough ride on that, and I think he's been proven to being well ahead of the
curve."
HAPPY IN HIS GARDEN Away
from royal duty or campaigning, Charles is happiest in the garden at his
Highgrove home in west England, or, like his late mother, walking and fishing
in the wild estates of the royal family's Scottish homes, where he also paints
watercolours. He enjoys hedgelaying and has written a children's book,
"The Old Man of Lochnagar". He is also passionate about arts,
especially the works of Shakespeare, opera and Leonard Cohen. In
private, he is fun with a "wicked sense of humour" but also
short-tempered and demanding, aides said. They reject accusations that he
insists on luxury, although they say he believes he must put on a regal show
when the situation demands. Some of those close to him say he is kind
and hard-working, and friends and foes speak of his devotion to duty, attending
to his papers until midnight most days. "The man never stops. I
mean when we were kids there were bags and bags and bags of work that the
office just sent to him. We could barely even get to his desk to say goodnight
to him." William said in a documentary to mark his father's 70th birthday.
Despite his long wait for the throne, the job is not something he often
thought about, his wife Camilla said. Asked if being king was something
he talked about, she replied: "Not very much, no. It's just something
that's going to happen." Those are sentiments Charles himself has
expressed. "Regrettably it comes as a result of the death of your
mother, of your parent, which is not so nice to say the least, so it's better
not to think too much about it," he said in 2010.
^ I’ve said it before and I will
continue to say it: Charles should not be King. He is too political and
outspoken to fulfill the position as his Mother did, and as I believe, his Son
Prince William will do. ^
https://www.reuters.com/world/uk/charles-britains-conflicted-new-monarch-2022-09-08/
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