The firm is in crisis

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Royal life

The ongoing challenges facing the monarchy cast a stark light on the current fragility of the Royal Family. Royal biographer Emily Andrews explains why it is crunch time

Just a year ago, the future of the Royal Family looked bright. It may have been pouring with rain on that May coronation day, but inside the flower-filled Westminster Abbey, King Charles, Queen Camilla, the Prince of Wales and a radiant Princess of Wales, plus George, Charlotte and Louis, all shone.

The loss of Queen Elizabeth, a colossus in our national psyche, culture and politics, was keenly felt, but the transition from mother to son felt calm, orderly and even celebratory.

Yet now, the royals appear vulnerable. Just when they expected 2024 to be a year of ‘quiet consolidation’ (a courtier told me), charity visits and foreign tours to the Commonwealth, such as Australia, Canada and Samoa, two of their main players have been sidelined from royal duties due to cancer treatment.

The King and the Princess of Wales have both had to step back from royal life

Health shock

It was a shock when it was first announced that the Princess of Wales had undergone planned abdominal surgery and would be out of action until at least Easter; and even more shocking when Kate made her video message to the nation saying she had cancer. For a seemingly fit and healthy 42-year-old to be enduring a course of chemotherapy (even if, as she told us, it was preventive) felt as heartbreaking as considering how she

had to tell her children George, Charlotte and Louis. And King Charles’ own cancer diagnosis, revealed in February, his withdrawal from public duties, plus the Prince of Wales’ lighter schedule (to support his wife and children) added to concerns about the slimmeddown Royal Family’s ability to continue its duties.

Put simply, there weren’t enough royals – starkly illustrated when Queen Camilla (who had been holding the royal fort) took a week’s holiday, leaving only the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh, and Princess Anne to carry the royal workload.

The string of devastating blows to the family was intensified by the sudden death of Thomas Kingston, the husband of the King’s cousin Lady Gabriella, who died by apparent suicide earlier this year. Kate’s diagnosis meant

William was absent from the memorial of his godfather, King Constantine, and so it was left to the disgraced Prince Andrew to lead the Royal Family into St George’s Chapel (the Queen arrived last, by car, as protocol dictates).

Along with the absence of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, since their rocky departure to America in 2020 and William and Harry’s ongoing feud, the current onslaught of issues feels unprecedented.

Instability and upset

The furore over Kate’s Photoshopped Mother’s Day picture only added fuel to the fire for the consp

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