This article appears in the issue of the Jerusalem Report dated 21 November 2022
"I'm not that stupid,” said the then-Prince Charles in a BBC interview in 2018. “I do realize it's a separate exercise being sovereign. The idea that somehow I'm going to carry on exactly in the same way is complete nonsense."
His comment reflects the fact that during his 70-year apprenticeship as heir to the British throne, he acquired the reputation for espousing a variety of causes close to his heart, and lobbying for them in ways which sometimes aroused surprise, or even controversy. A question often asked in those years was whether he ever would, or indeed could, change direction.
Like his father, Prince
Philip, Duke of Edinburgh, Charles as heir to the throne had no constitutional
role. Elizabeth II, the British monarch,
was head of state. Philip her consort,
and Charles her heir, had either to live purposeless lives or else forge
meaningful careers for themselves. It is
a tribute to them that they both managed to do this.
As Prince of Wales,
Charles was the patron or president of more than 400 organizations, and in 1976
he founded his own flagship charity, the Prince's Trust, to connect with what
he called the "hardest to reach in society". It has helped close to a million disadvantaged
young people from some of the poorest parts of the country transform their
lives by providing them with education, skills and employment. He set it up against government opposition.
"The Home Office
didn't think it was at all a good idea,” he once said. “It was quite difficult
to get it off the ground."
As Prince he was able to
act independently. As monarch – and
about this he is fully aware – he must act only on government advice. That lesson was made clear at the moment of
his accession, when a projected trip to the Middle East was cancelled. Charles, a lifelong environmental campaigner,
had planned on giving a speech at the 27th UN Climate Change Conference (COP27),
taking place in Egypt’s Sharm el-Sheikh between November 6-18. He cancelled the trip, the media reported, on
the advice of then-prime minister, Liz Truss, probably taking into
consideration the political implications of the new monarch’s first overseas
visit.
It was in 1984 that
Charles first burst into the headlines as an independent and controversial
voice with what became known as his carbuncle speech. Of all the things he has ever said in public
on matters of policy, this is what will probably never be forgotten, both for his
colorful language and for the impact it had on UK society. It proved to be the opening of his
decades-long campaign of opposition to modern architecture.
The occasion was the 150th anniversary of the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA), the setting Hampton Court Palace. Charles had been invited to present the Royal Gold Medal for Architecture to the Indian architect Charles Correa. Rather than handing over the award with a few gracious words, as was expected, Charles seized the opportunity to denounce a proposed extension to the National Gallery. The National Gallery flanks one side of Trafalgar Square, in the very center of London’s West End. Designs for an extension to house Britain’s collection of early Renaissance paintings had been put up for competition, and out of seven entries the design submitted by the architectural firm ABK had been adjudged the winner. Plans were proceeding for its erection.
A veritable hurricane of comment, both denunciation and approval, followed, but in the end the ABK scheme was abandoned in favor of a more modest design. Charles’s interest in architecture, though, continued unabated. In 2009 eminent British architect Richard Rogers blamed the prince for having him removed from a project to redesign Chelsea Barracks in West London. “We had hoped that Prince Charles had retreated from his position on modern architecture,” he told the media, “but he single-handedly destroyed this project.”
A few years after his carbuncle speech, Charles’s concerns about modern architecture led him to take the lead in an experiment in urban development – constructing a completely new town from scratch. Poundbury, in the county of Dorset, is designed entirely on traditional architectural lines, and is generally judged to be a great success. The work was sponsored by the royal Duchy of Cornwall, which is historically the preserve of the Prince of Wales. Charles handed the Duchy and its interests to his son, Prince William, shortly after acceding to the throne.
As a key weapon is his lobbying arsenal, Charles took to addressing government ministers, from the prime minister downwards, in a continual stream of memos and letters, handwritten by him in black ink. These documents, which came to be known as his “black spider memos”, were sent by Charles in a private capacity, but when news about them reached the media in 2005, it was thought they might represent the exercise of undue influence over British government ministers, and demands were made for them to be made public. Battles between the media and the government ensued, finally reaching the courts.
After several legal
cases the Supreme Court in March 2015 allowed for the publication of the
letters. However on their release, the
memos were variously described in the media as
"underwhelming" and "harmless", and one
paper claimed that their release had "backfired on those who seek to
belittle him".
Charles has always been
aware of the importance of religious belief in people’s lives, and has actively
supported the organizations representative of the many faiths active in modern
Britain. He has shown a particular
interest in the Jewish community, and the late Chief Rabbi, Lord Jonathan Sacks,
was a personal friend – a friendship now extended to the UK’s new Chief Rabbi,
Ephraim Mirvis. Charles’s coronation is
scheduled for Saturday May 6, 2023. To
assist Mirvis observe the Sabbath, the King and Queen Consort have invited him
and his wife Valerie, after they have attended Shabbat service with local
communities, to stay with them at Clarence House on the Friday night. Westminster Abbey, where the coronation will
take place, is less than a mile away.
In addition to being
head of state, the British monarch is head of the Church of England, and the
sovereign’s title – emphasized in the coronation ceremony – is Defender of the
Faith. Several years ago Charles indicated
that he would rather be known as defender of faith than simply defender of
British Protestantism. Although he has
not pressed this idea further, it does demonstrate that as king he is likely to
embrace what is now a multicultural, multi-faith Britain.
Charles is not likely to
lose his innate sympathy with the many causes close to his heart, but he has
certainly taken on board the fundamental difference in how he may do so,
compared with his previous incarnation.
William Shakespeare, as ever, has precisely the right words, which he
puts into the mouth of the young Henry V as he is about to be crowned:
Presume not that I am the thing I was,
For God doth know, so shall the world perceive
That I have turned away my former self.
During the coronation ceremony Charles will be asked if he is willing to assume the awesome responsibilities of being the sovereign head of state of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland and of his other realms and territories, and head of the Commonwealth. In doing so he will certainly be bringing a difference in tone to the monarchy – a greater awareness of, and in many cases a greater sympathy with, the issues that most concern today’s Britain. Over the years of his apprenticeship, the public has come to respect him for his causes, and in many cases come to see that he was ahead of his time in advocating them – issues like organic farming, climate change, wildlife preservation, and alternative therapies. Beneath the robes of state he will of course be the same man, but no one is more acutely aware than he that in future his actions must be subject to his new status.
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