Gulf News

Commonweal­th’s choice of head linked to Britain’s destiny

The Queen has pulled off quite a diplomatic coup for the global soft power of the British monarchy

- By Charles Moore ■ Charles Moore has been editor of the Spectator, the Sunday Telegraph and the Daily Telegraph. He is the authorised biographer of Margaret Thatcher.

Queen Elizabeth turned 92 yesterday. Her birthday present is the agreement that her eldest son will eventually succeed her as Head of the Commonweal­th. Most unusually for a woman who almost never expresses a direct personal wish, last week she specifical­ly, publicly asked for it. She made her request on Thursday. It arrived, gift-wrapped by 53 nations, at Windsor the following day.

A few days before the queen spoke, Jeremy Corbyn [Britain’s leader of the Opposition] gave his opinion on this matter. Declining to back the Prince of Wales for the role, he said that the headship of the Commonweal­th should be handed out “on a rotational basis”. I calculate that if the Corbyn rotation operated at the current rate of churn (66 years minimum), it would take 3,498 years for every member state to have a go at the job.

It has always been a question whether the Commonweal­th, and therefore its headship, mean very much. It has, after all, no formal power. One way to answer this question is to imagine what we would think if there were no Commonweal­th and if the head of state of another medium-sized country — the president of France, say, or Germany, or the emperor of Japan — had an equivalent role and commanded an equivalent vague yet heartfelt allegiance from nations in every continent. We would think it mattered, wouldn’t we? We would be envious of it.

Think of the scale. The population of the Commonweal­th today (2.4 billion) is roughly equal to that of the entire world when the queen became its head in 1952. Even the president of China, even the pope, lack that reach. Elizabeth II holds some sort of sway — titular, yet real — over more people than any other living human being in history.

She’s British. She is head of the Commonweal­th, and queen of 15 other realms within it, only because she is queen of the United Kingdom. She could be Britain’s queen without having those roles, but she could not have those roles without being Britain’s queen. To put it in modern jargon, this is soft power — beyond the wildest dreams of any political leader.

Of course, the paradox is that it has to be very soft indeed to be powerful. The Commonweal­th is the heir of Empire, and came into being only for that reason, yet if the former imperium were to use it to strike back, it would be struck down.

Indeed, there is sometimes an almost penitentia­l aspect to the enterprise. Britain is host to the Commonweal­th Secretaria­t in London. Britain, Australia and Canada between them pay 70 per cent of the Commonweal­th’s expenses. In return, these old, rich, white powers have to sit quietly and take stick from African and Caribbean countries, some of which have distinctly unimpressi­ve governance records. Last week, Britain got it in the neck in just this way over the “Windrush generation”.

Carefully calculated risk

If one considers the astonishin­g fact that last week, a 91-year-old white woman asked 53 mainly non-white countries to let her 69-year-old son inherit her moral authority over them, and they said yes, one recognises how skilfully it was prepared.

The prime minister, the Foreign Office, the Cabinet Office, the Commonweal­th Secretaria­t, the Commonweal­th leaders, its “chairmanin-office”, Buckingham Palace itself, and the woman who has watched over Commonweal­th affairs pulled it off. They faced down mutterings from the Indian Ministry of Foreign Affairs that it might be that great country’s turn to run the show. They guarded against all the possibilit­ies of protest and disunity. They took advantage of this Commonweal­th Conference being in London; of the queen attending what will almost certainly be her last one; even of it being her birthday. They carefully calculated the risk of the queen expressing her wish in public, and they took it. They got her to make the Commonweal­th leaders make her an offer she would not refuse. It may be the greatest coup for the hereditary principle since the Restoratio­n.

Why did the British authoritie­s go to this trouble? I suggest that Brexit played its part. For many years, Britain’s supposed European destiny moved its attention away from the wider world and its unique heritage in it. In the 21st century, however, it becomes more and more apparent that Europe is the declining area of the world. And the Commonweal­th, which has no presence on the European mainland, is the largest single entity in those areas that are growing. Britain is slowly waking up to the fact that it never ceased to be global.

This awakening has not yet attained the status of a strategy, let alone a set of policies, but it is the right attitude at last. Now let’s see what Britain does with its next two years in the Commonweal­th chair.

An interestin­g side-effect of the queen’s bold move is that it has stilled the debate about Prince Charles’s personal suitabilit­y. It prevented a campaign, and the division that goes with campaignin­g. La Reyne le veult (The Queen wills it), as it says on every Act of Parliament before it can become law. Those words settle a lot of things.

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