The Philippine Star

Heavy lies the crown

- By TINA BROWN

Help from other family members is scant aside from the redoubtabl­e Princess Anne, Charles’ sister, and the good-egg Gaiety Girl Queen Camilla. The slimmed-down monarchy that Charles always promoted is suddenly looking very lean indeed. The combinatio­n of the Harry and Meghan clown show in Montecito, California, the fusillades from Harry’s memoir, “Spare” and the disgrace of Prince Andrew – who has little social contact with anyone except his horse – have put William and Catherine under unmanageab­le pressure.

Catherine is the most popular member of the royal family after William. The future of the monarchy hangs by a thread, and that thread is her.

It may not be a popular thought, but in many ways I blame the predicamen­t and weakness of the monarchy today on Queen Elizabeth. It’s possible that future generation­s will see her as the Ruth Bader Ginsburg of the British monarchy. She stayed too long and, by doing so, left behind a legacy that may be the opposite of what she wanted.

The time for Elizabeth II to step down was not long after her Diamond Jubilee in 2012, the year I have come to think of as “Peak London,” when Britain dazzlingly hosted the Olympics. Elizabeth II had embarked on a triumphant­ly healing visit for the first time to the Republic of Ireland in 2011, Prince Charles proved he was a settled married man at last to Camilla, Prince Harry was a national hero after two military tours of Afghanista­n and Prince William and Kate Middleton had recently tied the knot at Westminste­r Abbey in a blaze of national good will.

It would have been such a gift to her heirs if at that glorious moment Elizabeth II had stepped aside, like the Queen of Denmark did in January 2024. After 52 years on the throne, Margrethe II announced her abdication in her New Year’s address with the elegant explanatio­n, “The time takes its toll.”

Instead, Elizabeth II stayed on some 10 years – to the end. Apparently to honor her oath to serve “my whole life whether it be long or short,” but actually because she loved her job. She had seen how bored and marginaliz­ed the Queen Mother felt when, widowed young by George VI and deprived of power dinners with heads of state or the inside scoop from her husband’s tête-à-têtes with the prime minister, she was relegated to boring rounds of cutting ribbons in those huge feathery hats. No, Elizabeth II loved the world of politics and power as much as she did breeding horses and tramping the heather of her Balmoral estate.

But her 70-year reign has left a pileup of heirs infantiliz­ed by too little to do and trapped by a dusty structure that should have been reformed decades ago.

Charles, full of prescient ideas, inventive concepts of philanthro­py and imaginativ­e plans of how to modernize the monarchy, saw his hopes and dreams curdle as he waited and waited to put them into action. The beleaguere­d flexitaria­n was only allowed to marry the woman he loved when he was 56 years old. Even with the best prognosis for his cancer, he has been left with a rueful rump of a reign. His sad-sack motto was always “just my luck,” but that has never seemed more true than now.

And William, instead of taking over the Duchy of Cornwall estates in his early 30s and creating a space for the popular Harry to develop a strong portfolio of his own, ended up in a rivalrous relationsh­ip with his younger brother that exploded irretrieva­bly when Meghan Markle entered the scene. A less hidebound palace might have come up with a more creative way to solve the Sussex imbroglio.

The fascinatio­n of the crown will always be the tension between a venerable institutio­n and the human beings who are trapped inside it. Isn’t it just too cruel to expect modern mortals to live and love and parent in such a blistering­ly unforgivin­g media gaze?

Catherine is battling more – much more – than cancer. A tidal wave of premature responsibi­lity is crashing in her and William’s direction. Frozen, unready and with Catherine now seriously unwell, the Prince and Princess of Wales await the awesome burden of the Crown. – NYT

* * * Tina Brown is the author of “The Diana Chronicles” and “The Palace Papers.”

Catherine is battling more – much more – than cancer. A tidal wave of premature responsibi­lity is crashing in her and William’s direction. Frozen, unready and with Catherine now seriously unwell, the Prince and Princess of Wales await the awesome burden of the Crown.

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