EIIR
Heir Presumptive
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2011
- Messages
- 2,656
- City
- Somewhere
- Country
- United Kingdom
Actually, as your monarchs do nothing substantive to or for the government, their private lives have little bearing on how the government works. Charles the II was a long time ago and bringing in James, whose big sin was becoming Catholic, also a long time ago, is not relevant. Eward the VII, had dozens of mistresses, in fact his favorite was Camilla's grandmother. But Edward, faults and all was popular, so he stayed. Jump forward to the present day, you have a very dedicated woman who has done her best in this job, but the world doesn't sink or swim on her opinions and she has had and still has some dubious relatives, whom the country will inherit. No one is chopping off heads.
Of course we're not chopping off heads; we no longer need to go to those lengths to get things done. Edward VII was accepted and admired by the people because he did his job to the best of his ability and in a way that the British people supported. I used the examples as evidence that the British people have a rebellious streak in them, and are not averse to removing a monarch they don't want.
If during the collective national mass hysteria after Diana's death the Queen had refused to bow to the mob, and there had been big demonstrations in the streets for a prolonged period, does anyone genuinely think that nothing would've happened? The politicians, realising that they're on the wrong side of the prevailing mood would've jumped on the bandwagon, as would the press and the media. In that atmosphere, the PM would likely be advising the Queen to abdicate, and she would have to take that advice; or there would be a referendum on whether to abolish the monarchy and become a republic.
Our constitutional monarchy is not an immovable relic that doesn't change; it's constantly evolving to reflect the nation and people that it serves.