The Daily Telegraph

Coronation ‘will be value for the taxpayer’

May 6 ceremony will be done properly without extravagan­t spending, Dowden assures MPS

- By Victoria Ward Royal Editor

THE Coronation will not be a display of “lavishness and excess” but will provide “value for the taxpayer”, the Government has insisted.

However, Oliver Dowden, the Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, said it was “important” to mark such a “marvellous” moment properly and the public did not want “a dour scrimping and scraping”.

Mr Dowden was asked at the public administra­tion and constituti­onal affairs committee how the Government planned to fund the May 6 Coronation.

Ronnie Cowan, SNP MP, said the ceremony would come at a time of “unpreceden­ted strain on the public purse”.

Mr Dowden replied: “It has always been the case that the Coronation is an enormously important moment in the history of our nation, and it is right that the Government play their role in the funding of the Coronation.

“Nonetheles­s, of course, the King and the Government are mindful of ensuring that there is value for the taxpayer.”

Mr Cowan suggested that for the Coronation to be “appropriat­ely reflective of today”, it would not be a lavish expense for the British taxpayer.

“There will be £3.5 billion-worth of jewellery on display during these three days,” he said. “How do you explain that to people in my constituen­cy who cannot heat their homes?”

Mr Dowden said: “You will not see lavishness or excess. However, if you are advocating the sale of the Crown Jewels or the sale of the Gold State Coach, I would totally disagree and I would argue that most people would totally disagree with you.”

He said it was right to celebrate in a way that allowed the nation to come together, as it had done for Queen Elizabeth II’S jubilees and for her own 1953 coronation. “These are moments in the life of our nation. They bring joy to millions of people. They also mark us out as a nation around the world. I expect that people around the world will tune into it and we will have representa­tives from the realms, from the Commonweal­th and from other nations.

“It is a marvellous moment in our history and people would not want a dour scrimping and scraping. They would want an appropriat­e ceremony. That is what we will have.”

The King is understood to have rejected the idea of a cut-price Coronation and wishes to use the occasion to showcase “UK plc”.

However, he is said to be deeply conscious of the cost of living crisis and there is clear acknowledg­ment that the ceremony will take place at a time of hardship, meaning that every penny must be accounted for and justified.

The Coronation will be shorter than the late Queen’s, with fewer attendees, better reflecting the modern monarchy and modern Britain. The Queen’s coronation cost an estimated £1.57 million, around £46million in today’s money.

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