Edmonton Journal

Royal brand may help Britain navigate Brexit damage

- DIANE FRANCIS

The Royal Wedding of Prince Harry and American actress Meghan Markle proved that Buckingham Palace is the best branding and special event planning organizati­on on the planet and that Brexit may not be a total disaster after all.

That the roguish prince fell in love with an actress is pure luck and, coincident­ally, hugely strategic. She is perfectly suited for her supporting role in what can only be described as the world’s most polished family reality show.

While they live relatively normal family lives behind Palace gates and guards, the fact is that no Royal steps foot outside their palaces without preparatio­n, costuming, makeup, lighting, scripting and the support of a public relations army.

Added to the backing of a gigantic publicity machine, the new Duchess of Sussex married the most popular Royal at the moment, apart from the Queen, and she is a worthy role model across the Commonweal­th’s 52 nations as an independen­tly successful African-American woman.

The wedding drew the fourthbigg­est television audience globally ever and it’s impossible to imagine the volume of requests being made for her time from speeches, to endorsemen­ts of charities, to honorary degrees and travel around the world.

For Britain, the popularity of this glamorous couple comes at a critical time. The Royal Family underpins its tourist industry. London is the world’s second biggest tourist attraction with close to 20 million visitors annually, just behind Bangkok and ahead of Dubai, Singapore and Paris.

The marriage will also help Britain navigate around the damage caused by its Brexit decision. That is because Brexit proponents intend to resurrect the Commonweal­th tariff-free agreement at upcoming meetings this summer. And Meghan’s acceptance by a monarchy and country represents an inflection point to many around the world and certainly across the Commonweal­th.

Canada is to be one of the four initial members of a rebooted Commonweal­th, along with Australia, New Zealand and the United Kingdom followed by India, South Africa, then the other 46 nations. In total, the 52 Commonweal­th nations comprise one-third of the world’s population — or 2.3 billion people — and would be the biggest free trade market globally.

That would be enormously positive for Canada, especially in tandem with the fact that Canada has a free-trade agreement with the European Union, which the United States does not. A Commonweal­th deal and European Union deal would make Canada a very desirable place for increasing­ly protection­ist Americans to export tariff-free to almost half the world without inking a free trade deal themselves.

The Royal Family is now in a unique position to help influence global events as well as to remain wealthy and beloved by its “subjects.” The business valuation consultanc­y Brand Finance estimated last year that the British Royal Family is worth about US$95 billion, the Independen­t reports.

These celebrity newlyweds certainly have it all: Titles, fame, fortune and a berth in the family’s London compound with its 775 rooms and 1,000 employees. Now they can live happily ever after … as long as they all get along.

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