British royal family’s future hangs by a thread, with illness, squalor, and strife.

British royal family’s future hangs by a thread, with illness, squalor, and strife.

The heir Prince William and his wife Kate are expected to be absent from King Charles’s first public appearance at a royal function on Sunday, which will highlight the monarchy’s current state of disarray. 

According to Buckingham Palace, the 75-year-old monarch and his wife Queen Camilla will attend the customary Easter Sunday church service at Windsor Castle. This yearly event is often attended by all of the senior royals.

William, Kate, and their kids George, 10, Charlotte, 8, and Louis, 5, won’t be there, though, since the Princess of Wales said last week that she had started cancer-preventive chemotherapy after undergoing stomach surgery in January. 

Erin Hill, senior royal editor of People magazine, stated that King Charles “really wanted to have a slimmed-down monarchy when he took on the throne but he never could have anticipated slimming down to where it is now.” “This is going to be a complicated time for the royal family.”

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However, his inner circle now has huge gaps, most notably due to the 39-year-old younger son Prince Harry, and his wife Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, moving to the United States three years ago. 

Prince Andrew, 64, the younger brother of Charles, was expelled from the public eye in 2019 due to his association with the deceased American sexual criminal Jeffrey Epstein.

Not a wise decision                                 

“Well, I think the ‘slimmed-down’ was said in a day when there were a few more people around to make that seem like a justifiable comment,” Princess Anne, the younger sister of the king, stated in an interview conducted last year.  

From where I stand, I have to say, it doesn’t seem like a smart idea. I’m not sure what else we can do at this point. 

Many of the surviving formal working royals, or those who do tasks for the king including presenting awards, inaugurating new buildings, and hosting foreign guests, are now members of Queen Elizabeth’s generation.

Although Elizabeth’s other cousins, Prince Edward, the Duke of Kent, and Prince Richard, the Duke of Gloucester, are ages 88 and 79, respectively, Princess Alexandra, her cousin and longtime friend, is rarely spotted in public these days.

Although Princess Anne is frequently ranked as the royal with the greatest work ethic, she will turn 74 this year. According to her son Peter Phillips, she was most likely working harder than she had anticipated this week.

“She’s still doing overseas trips and turning around in 24 hours which is pretty hard on most people … but when you’re in your 70s and doing that it’s pretty remarkable,” he stated to Sky News in Australia. 

He stated that there was “definitely a short-term pressure on certain members of the family to continue to be out and about”. In addition to his mother, he observed how much work Camilla and Prince Edward, the younger brother of Charles, and his wife Sophie—now the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh—were putting in. 

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Although Camilla and William had done a “sterling job” in Charles’ absence, royal biographer Claudia Joseph acknowledged it would not have been simple. 

“On a personal level, it’s going to be awful for the royals,” she stated. “Obviously, on a practical level, it makes things difficult.”

While surveys indicate that the majority of Britons still support the monarchy, they also indicate that this majority is becoming smaller due to a widening divide between younger generations who are uninterested and older generations who are passionate.

The next youngest royals in the workforce, after William and Kate, are Edward, who turned 60 this month, and Sophie, who will do the same next year.

The children of William and Kate won’t join the ranks for at least ten years after that.

According to royal expert Tina Brown, William and Kate are under “unmanageable pressure” as the monarchy appears to be extremely slender.

This week, she stated in the New York Times that Catherine is the most well-liked member of the royal family following William. “The future of the monarchy hangs by a thread, and that thread is her.”

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