April 20, 2011

  • Royal wedding

     

    Royal wedding: What next for William after the
    wedding?



    Prince William in RAF uniform Prince William will be focusing on his career in the RAF


    “William to be the next king”, is a seductively attractive
    headline.


    It offers freshness, youth and the prospect of a soon-to-be-married prince as
    a head of state in waiting.


    Several opinion polls have suggested the son should replace the father at the
    front of the queue.


    But royal succession isn’t a beauty contest, or an episode of The X Factor.
    British citizens and subjects are observers of the process, not voters.


    Constantine of Greece knows all about royal destiny. His time came, briefly,
    in the 1960s, before he was deposed in a military coup and his birthplace voted
    to become a republic.


    Living in exile in London for decades, he has watched Prince William, his
    godson, grow up.


    When the prince, who’s an RAF search and rescue pilot, became engaged, the
    former king of Greece told the BBC he’d warned William in a letter that, “it was
    dangerous to fly a helicopter when you’re in love.


    “I said, ‘Be careful, concentrate on that helicopter now and think of
    Catherine later on!’”


    The ex-monarch is a stickler for the status quo. He doesn’t believe William,
    who he describes as “a hell of a nice guy”, should leapfrog Prince Charles.


    Constantine said: “It works from father to son or mother to son and that’s
    how it goes. They have to wait their turn… that’s how it should be, because we
    are not politicians. We don’t strive for that chair. The chair is there if it’s
    needed.”

    ‘Madness to be king’

    There are voices of dissent. One of the more surprising supporters of an
    abandonment of royal business-as-usual is former newspaper editor Sir Max
    Hastings.


    An article he wrote about the Prince of Wales in the Daily Mail last year was
    headlined “Why I believe it would be madness for him to be king”.


    In an interview with the BBC, Sir Max suggested that the longer the Queen
    reigned, the more attractive a king William might become.



    Start Quote



    After his marriage… Prince William won’t be skulking
    around waiting for a vacant throne to occupy”

    End Quote

    “If time passes and Prince William is more and more at the centre of the
    stage, one question I think is bound to be asked,” he said.


    “Would it be in everybody’s interests – including those of the Prince of
    Wales – for a new, young, next-generation Prince William to succeed to the
    throne? I think an enormous amount will depend on what seems to be the will of
    the British people.”


    The will of William is clear. He doesn’t want to rock the Windsor boat.


    He has a healthy grandmother, his father shows no sign of giving up on his
    long wait for what his ex-wife called “the top job”, and he was born into an
    institution which is still scarred by the trauma of Edward’s
    abdication.

    Homeless

    After his marriage to Kate Middleton, Prince William won’t be skulking around
    waiting for a vacant throne to occupy.




     
     

      

    Ex-King Constantine of Greece said his godson was
    straightforward, hardworking and a “hell of a nice guy”


    His focus will be on married life and his job on Anglesey with the RAF. He’ll
    make more trips overseas representing an octogenarian monarch and he’ll continue
    to work for his chosen charities.


    These include Centrepoint, which helps young homeless people. At first glance
    it’s an unlikely pairing – a prince in a palace aiding people who have no roof
    over their head.


    Those who have seen William in action insist it’s a mutually beneficial
    relationship.


    Anthony Lawton was Centrepoint’s chief executive when the son of Diana,
    Princess of Wales became its patron.


    Diana introduced William and Harry to the plight of the homeless. Mr Lawton
    says getting the prince involved was his “biggest achievement” when he ran the
    charity.


    Prince William with Centrepoint worker William slept rough in London
    as part of his involvement with homeless charity Centrepoint

    He says William got stuck in from the outset – learning to cook his first
    lasagne – and he could relate to the young people he met because of their shared
    knowledge of popular culture.


    The former chief executive insists the future king’s interest is more than
    skin-deep, adding: “He does it because he really cares about it”.


    Another thing he cares about passionately is how his wife-to-be will cope as
    a senior member of a family like no other.


    In the build-up to his wedding, there’s one statistic which may just have
    given the prince pause for thought.


    The government estimates the global television audience for the celebration
    will be two billion.


    That’s two billion people with possibly more than a passing interest in his
    peculiar existence.


    Two billion people who may not be satisfied with a “now you see them, now you
    don’t” approach to royal life in the coming months and years.


    But that’s precisely how Prince William wants to play it. He’s sidling, not
    striding to embrace his destiny.


    Caution – borne out of Diana’s troubled life as a princess – is embedded in
    his DNA.


    After the wedding there will be demands, possibly vocal ones, for William and
    Kate to be more and more on display.


    These will be demands which William will be determined not to
    satisfy.

     

    Copyright.2011.BBC.com  All Rights Reserved

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