EIIR
Heir Presumptive
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2011
- Messages
- 2,656
- City
- Somewhere
- Country
- United Kingdom
We also should be careful when we say that the Queen is apolitical or never expresses political opinions, which is simply not the case. Everything we do is political, every choice we make is political.
So, when the Queen act as a beater and trains her dogs to take part in the shoots at Balmoral or Sandringham, she's making a political statement by choosing to actively partake in a controversial sport. When she accepts hundreds of thousands of pounds of agricultural subsidies as part of the EU's bonkers Common Agricultural Policy, she puts herself in a tricky position because the British government are hugely opposed to and committed to massive reform of the CAP. When she said during a speech she gave for her Silver Jubilee, "I cannot forget that I was crowned Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland", it sounds totally unremarkable, until you realise that she said this in the context of rising Scottish nationalism and demands for devolution. It was an overtly political statement, making clear for all to see that she did not support such moves.
The reason this has worked for the Queen is not that she is not political, but that she is not party political. There is a big difference between the two, and it is a difference which Charles has always respected.
So, when the Queen act as a beater and trains her dogs to take part in the shoots at Balmoral or Sandringham, she's making a political statement by choosing to actively partake in a controversial sport. When she accepts hundreds of thousands of pounds of agricultural subsidies as part of the EU's bonkers Common Agricultural Policy, she puts herself in a tricky position because the British government are hugely opposed to and committed to massive reform of the CAP. When she said during a speech she gave for her Silver Jubilee, "I cannot forget that I was crowned Queen of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland", it sounds totally unremarkable, until you realise that she said this in the context of rising Scottish nationalism and demands for devolution. It was an overtly political statement, making clear for all to see that she did not support such moves.
The reason this has worked for the Queen is not that she is not political, but that she is not party political. There is a big difference between the two, and it is a difference which Charles has always respected.
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