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What challenges will Liz Truss and King Charles’ relationship face?

  • September 18, 2022
  • Sport

The UK is adjusting to life under new rulers following the arrival of both a new prime minister and a new monarch within the space of 48 hours.

“Not since Britain became a democracy in the 19th century has the country had this double churn,” said historian Anthony Seldon in The Times. Less than two weeks ago, Boris Johnson was in No. 10 and Queen Elizabeth II was on the throne; now, Liz Truss is head of our government and King Charles III is our monarch.

The first PM to serve under the late Queen was Winston Churchill, and they developed a “deep and enduring friendship”, according to British Heritage Travel magazine. Whether Truss and Charles will do likewise is a matter of speculation, following the first of their weekly private audiences last Friday.

Why does their relationship matter?

Britain’s recent PMs have often “boasted” about how this nation “thrives in a world where other countries are either massively richer or significantly more ruthless”, wrote ITV News’ political editor Robert Peston. This success has been attributed to Britain’s “soft power” through “our democracy, our culture, our history, our language – and our late Queen Elizabeth”, Peston continued. 

For 70 years, the Queen was the “personification of that soft power” and the “apolitical underpinning of our parliamentary democracy”. She was the ultimate “matriarch”. But while King Charles automatically inherited her throne, “he cannot assume he will automatically be seen as the unquestioned patriarch of the country”, Peston added. 

Whether “the monarchical foundation of our parliamentary democracy will be weakened or strengthened” may hinge on “the strength and nature of the relationship” between Charles and Truss. Their reputations, and “the UK’s culturally, diplomatically and economically important soft power”, will be “inextricably, symbiotically linked”.

What issues will Truss and Charles have to tackle?

Arguably the greatest challenge that they will face together is keeping the union whole, suggested Sebastian Payne in the Financial Times. During the 2014 Scottish independence referendum, a rare intervention by the Queen – who urged the Scottish public to “think very carefully about the future” before voting – no doubt “helped save the union”, said Payne.

But “the threat of a break-up has not gone away”, he continued, and both Truss and the new King “must grapple with the long trend towards independence”.

Article source: https://www.theweek.co.uk/news/society/957955/what-challenges-are-facing-liz-truss-and-king-charles-relationship

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