Scottish Daily Mail

Cameron rebuked by Palace for Queen revelation

How ex-PM’s revelation about this sequence of events has sparked a royal rumpus Palace hits out at claim he urged her to intervene over indyref

- By Jason Groves and Rebecca English

DAVID Cameron angered the Queen yesterday after boasting that he leaned on her to intervene in the independen­ce referendum.

in an unpreceden­ted royal rebuke last night, Palace officials said that the former prime minister had caused Her Majesty ‘an amount of displeasur­e’ with his claim.

a royal source told the Mail: ‘ Make no mistake, they are furious about this.’

it came after Mr Cameron revealed, in a TV documentar­y to promote his memoirs, that he held discussion­s with the Royal household during the referendum campaign and suggested the Queen could boost the case for scotland to remain in the UK. He suggested that even a ‘raising of the eyebrow’ would make a difference.

The revelation immediatel­y triggered a political row, with the SNP crying foul over Mr Cameron’s attempt to ‘manipulate the head of state’ during the bitterly fought referendum battle.

Within a few hours, the former prime minister was left embarrasse­d after Palace sources made clear there was intense irritation at his decision to breach the protocol governing conversati­ons with the Queen and her senior advisors, conversati­ons which prime ministers are expected to take to the grave.

The row was the result of a BBC documentar­y timed to coincide with the release of the former prime minister’s memoirs. in it Mr Cameron claimed the Queen was approached during the closing stages of the referendum when polls suggested the independen­ce campaign could win.

Mr Cameron said: ‘i remember conversati­ons i had with my private secretary and he had with the Queen’s private secretary and i had with the Queen’s private secretary, not asking for anything that would be in any way improper or unconstitu­tional, but just a raising of the eyebrow, even, you know, a quarter of an inch, we thought would make a difference.’

a week later, the Queen told a well-wisher near Balmoral that she hoped ‘people would think very carefully about the future’ before casting their votes. The apparently neutral comment was widely reported as a clear sign that she opposed the break-up of her kingdom. Yesterday, the SNP seized on Mr Cameron’s claim as evidence of foul play during the 2014 poll.

Former scottish first minister alex salmond said: ‘Begging a constituti­onal monarch to make a political interventi­on is not only totally improper, but an indication of how desperate Cameron was in the final stages of the campaign.’

Jeremy Corbyn also said Mr Cameron appeared to have acted ‘improperly’. Constituti­onal expert Robert Hazell accused Mr Cameron of ‘blabbing’ about the Queen to promote his book. ‘His previous career was in PR and this is a classic PR stunt,’ he said.

Professor Hazell, of University College london’s constituti­on unit, said the revelation was potentiall­y damaging to the Queen’s reputation for neutrality.

He said: ‘The Queen has been a model of neutrality. This is the first occasion i can remember that that might have slipped a little bit, so i can understand her displeasur­e.’

Five years ago Mr Cameron had to apologise to the Queen after boasting she had ‘purred down the line’

QUEEN’S FEAR OVER BREAK UP OF BRITAIN

after he called her to tell her Scotland had voted No to independen­ce.

He yesterday said that had been a ‘terrible mistake’. and when asked on BBC radio 4’s Today programme to expand on his claim that he had persuaded the Queen to intervene in the referendum he said: ‘I am sure some people think – possibly even me – that I have already said too much.’

Yesterday, a senior royal source said the suggestion there was an ‘amount of displeasur­e’ at Buckingham Palace over mr Cameron’s claims was ‘not unfair’.

a second source said: ‘For her former prime minister to discuss their talks like this is unpreceden­ted and will be seen as a betrayal of his office, I’m afraid.’

Baroness Fall, a former aide to mr Cameron, denied he had made the revelation to promote his book, adding: ‘I don’t think he meant to embarrass anybody – least of all the Queen.’

FOR centuries, convention has dictated that the British monarch, as head of state, keeps – and is kept – out of politics. Discussion­s between the Queen and prime ministers – and she has worked alongside 14 – should stay secret to preserve the delicate constituti­onal balance.

During 67 years on the throne, quietly and without complaint, Elizabeth II has upheld this impeccably. So it is an outrageous breach of trust for David Cameron to arrogantly blab about asking for her help during the independen­ce referendum in 2014, suggesting she could ‘ raise an eyebrow’ in the close-fought campaign.

Why disgracefu­lly drag her into a row? Well, he’s got a book to sell. Little wonder his betrayal caused ‘ an amount of displeasur­e’ – code for fury – at Buckingham Palace. Far too many conversati­ons between politician­s, including Boris, and the Queen have become public. When they do, the sensitive relationsh­ip – vital for the UK’s well-being – cannot thrive.

If only our self-aggrandisi­ng elected representa­tives displayed a smidgeon of the Queen’s discretion and sense of duty.

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 ??  ?? As the Nationalis­ts seem to gain ground in the poll, the Queen meets PM David Cameron at Balmoral
As the Nationalis­ts seem to gain ground in the poll, the Queen meets PM David Cameron at Balmoral
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 ??  ?? The Queen speaks to wellwisher­s at Crathie about the referendum Delight: Mr Cameron with son Arthur and daughter Nancy as the poll result is announced
The Queen speaks to wellwisher­s at Crathie about the referendum Delight: Mr Cameron with son Arthur and daughter Nancy as the poll result is announced

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