The Daily Telegraph

King faces new ‘lockdown’ of remote working and video calls

His Majesty determined to continue working as normal but doctors may insist on reduced contact

- By Victoria Ward Deputy Royal editor

‘He might complain about some things but work isn’t one of them. Having a lot on his plate is what he likes’

As the King faces a new way of working, royal aides will draw on the blueprint created during lockdown, when public engagement­s were abandoned and business was conducted at arm’s length.

The pandemic experience may prove something of a godsend for the Buckingham Palace team tasked with ensuring that, to the watching world at least, the monarch’s hand remains firmly on the tiller.

As the King, 75, embarks on a new routine of outpatient hospital appointmen­ts and potentiall­y gruelling treatment, he is determined to maintain his constituti­onal role.

He has vowed to continue his weekly audiences with Rishi Sunak and to make himself available for Privy Council meetings and select private meetings, even though in the longer term they may take a different form.

If the King is advised by his medical team to significan­tly reduce public contact in order to minimise infection risk, he will revert to video conferenci­ng and remote calls.

Royal aides admit that the monarch’s new regime is still being worked through, the focus thus far having been on managing his health and care, followed by planning how his diagnosis was shared with the world.

Only now, with the King’s treatment plan in place and messages of support flooding in from world leaders, has the focus shifted to the day-to-day.

Charles plans to balance his time by hopping between various residences, spending short periods of the week in London, where he is being treated, followed by longer periods at either Highgrove, his Gloucester­shire home, or Sandringha­m in Norfolk.

Wherever he is, sources insist, the King will be “working throughout” and is hoping that meetings will continue to be held in person.

“Although he has been advised to minimise public-facing duties, this is not because he has been physically impacted by his diagnosis or his treatment but to lower the threshold of risk,” one source said.

“A meeting involving five people is very different to walking down a street through a crowd of hundreds.”

If the King’s doctors advise him to stop flitting between residences and to reduce his travel, he will do so.

His weekly audience with the Prime Minister, traditiona­lly on a Wednesday, would be the last commitment he would forgo, the Telegraph understand­s.

Such a busy weekly travel schedule may sound exhausting to most people in their mid-70s but for the King, it is entirely normal.

“We have become used to a peripateti­c court,” one aide wryly noted, reflecting on his boss’s tendency to bounce around. Indeed, it is rare for the monarch to spend more than two nights in any one place.

In recent months, the King had tended to spend Thursdays and Fridays at Windsor Castle, before returning on a Sunday afternoon to see his three elder grandchild­ren, Prince George, 10, Princess Charlotte, eight, and Prince Louis, five.

With Windsor no longer featuring in his weekly schedule, such visits may now be curtailed.

The most dramatic shift, however, will be the enforced abandonmen­t of public engagement­s.

The King is known for encouragin­g aides to cram as many official visits into a day as is humanly possible as he enjoying being out and about.

Instead, he will busy himself reading up on matters of state and the latest developmen­ts concerning his various charities and environmen­tal interests.

As royal author Robert Hardman revealed in his book, Charles III, the King loves to read, often asking for more informatio­n from state papers.

“He reads a lot of stuff he doesn’t need to read,” Mr Hardman quoted one aide as saying. “He might complain about some things but work isn’t one of them. Having a lot on his plate is what he likes.”

For the King, correspond­ence is a form of relaxation, much preferred over watching television, for example.

As such, he will likely revel in the influx of letters he is now likely to receive as people near and far respond to his cancer diagnosis. Meanwhile, the desire for the King to be seen will almost certainly result in images being released of the monarch at work, or videos of selected meetings.

The new routine will see the palace plunged once again into its digital-first strategy, embracing the prospect of video conferenci­ng and dialling into meetings remotely.

Back in 2020 Prince Charles, as he was then, was said to have embraced the changes presented by lockdown.

Clive Alderton, who remains his principal private secretary, said at the time: “Their Royal Highnesses adapted literally overnight to a new digital first way of working.”

He revealed that both Charles and Camilla used everything from Zoom to Microsoft Teams, even House Party.

Simon Lewis, communicat­ion secretary to Elizabeth II from 1998 until 2000, acknowledg­ed that much of the back and forth between Number 10 and Buckingham Palace went on behind the scenes.

“The King will be absolutely focused on that and I know, from the people around him, that he will be absolutely itching to get on with that,” he told Radio 4’s Today programme.

“It’s getting the balance right between being treated for cancer but wanting to get on with the day job.”

Mr Hardman agreed that aides would be hoping to maintain their upbeat approach.

“At the time of Covid, we ended up seeing and hearing a lot more of the Queen than we were used to… I think we can look to more of that,” he said.

 ?? ?? Charles will remain focused on work but will avoid engagement­s in public to minimise risk during his treatment
Charles will remain focused on work but will avoid engagement­s in public to minimise risk during his treatment

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