The Scotsman

‘Here come the royals. Celebrity radiance and endless fertility’

Democratic maturity may require the Mountbatte­n Windsors to be given their marching orders, writes Joyce Mcmillan

- JOYCE MCMILLAN,

Ah, royalty. Amid the gloom and chaos of Brexit, here they come, with their celebrity radiance and endless fertility, presenting another beautiful new royal baby to the cameras, as a welcome distractio­n from uglier news. Only the terminally meanminded will fail to be glad for

Prince Harry and Meghan as they become parents; in different ways, both had difficult young lives, and their moment of joy is not to be grudged.

It is not their fault if large sections of the British media (and indeed of the British people) tend to lose their wits at the very mention of a royal infant, producing eight-page wrap-around supplement­s and spread after spread of pictures, as if little Archie – only seventh in line to the throne – were automatica­lly destined to become a figure of historical note.

I recall being stuck in an airport lounge, near a television, on the day in 2013 when the Duchess of Cambridge emerged from hospital with her first baby, Prince George, and watching in horror as a team of erstwhile respectabl­e journalist­s spent several waiting hours trawling the crowd of mainly elderly royal enthusiast­s for anyone with anything coherent to say at all. If more vacuous nonsense has ever been talked in the course of a single broadcast, then I will cheerfully eat a copy of the Daily Telegraph royal baby pull-out; and as for BBC Royal Correspond­ent Nicholas Witchell’s momentary meltdown on Monday evening, as he struggled for words in front of Buckingham Palace, it was hard not to feel that he had, inadverten­tly or not, summed up the situation to perfection.

Yet the fact is that however much republican­s wish that it were not so – and however empty-headed most British coverage of the royal family may be – there are still interestin­g things to be said about the persistenc­e of royalty in the modern world, and what it means. In Britain and Ireland, there is a tradition of republican discourse – naturally strong in the Scottish National Party – which identifies Britain’s monarchy as a symbol of an empirebuil­ding state which was always loosely cobbled together out of four nations, which required huge amounts of imperial mythology to sustain it, and which has now signally failed to reform itself for a more democratic age; and in the case of UK, there is plenty of evidence to support that view, not so much in the conduct of

the monarchy itself – which often seems to understand more about modern devolved Britain than the Westminste­r government does – as in the bizarrely reverentia­l attitude to it of so many British establishm­ent figures and institutio­ns.

The fact is, though, that Britain is far from being the only modern developed nation with a monarchy. Of the EU’S current 28 members, seven are monarchies, with Norway providing an eighth example of successful monarchy in western Europe. In most of those countries – which include, in Norway, Denmark and Sweden, three of the most egalitaria­n and successful social democracie­s on Earth – support for the continuati­on of the monarchy runs at between 70 and 80 per cent; and even in Spain – where the post-1975 monarchy began as a symbol of the return of democracy after the death of Franco, but has now, in the current Catalan crisis, drifted into a more reactionar­y position – more than half of voters still support the institutio­n. And if we look beyond Europe, it’s clear that there is no direct relationsh­ip between the existence of monarchy and backward-looking or oppressive government; indeed the countries with the most illiberal regimes tend not to be monarchies, but – like Brazil, Russia, Turkey and the Philippine­s – populist democracie­s with elected Presidents who assume quasi-monarchica­l powers.

There is therefore something more complex going on, in the world of modern monarchy, than the mere festival of right-wing reaction that some exasperate­d British republican­s will detect this week. In the end, every country must have a head of state to symbolise the nation. In every case, however modest the individual, that person will achieve some celebrity, carry some glamour, and command some loyalty, as the representa­tive of a whole people; and if we look – as British exceptiona­lists so often fail to do – beyond these shores, we can see a world of nations coping in a range of ways with this need for symbolic representa­tion, and with the fame it brings. Some countries – Ireland, Finland, Germany – work well with an elected head of state whose role is ceremonial, and clearly separated from that of the head of government. Some – France, the United States – have survived so far with constituti­ons that combine the roles of head of state and head of government in a single elected presidency, although the dangers are increasing­ly obvious.

And elsewhere, hereditary monarchy continues to play its symbolic part; but usually by clear invitation of the people, as part of a broadly republican constituti­on. At its best, a well-regulated hereditary monarchy can perhaps provide a point of calm amid the hurly-burly of politics, a symbol of continuity, and of the basic principles of the state; it also offers a national reflection, however wealthy or atypical, of those human and family moments – including childbirth – that, in the end, matter most to most of us.

There is a world of difference, though, between representi­ng the nation, and claiming a kind of royal monopoly on the magic, beauty and charisma that should, in a good society, be inherent in every human life. It may well be that the British habit of deference to, and mystical reverence for, the monarchy, is just too pro - found for the nation’s good; and that the country – or countries – will only achieve full democratic maturity when the Mountbatte­n Windsors are finally given their marching orders.

Yet still, the strange and varied recent history of monarchy in Europe suggests that evolution towards republican­ism is not as simple as some on the left would argue; and that in the search for individual­s or families to represent whole nations, all systems are so imperfect that the one that gave us this week’s outbreak of baby-worship over little Archie Windsor may not be for the guillotine, any time soon.

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 ??  ?? 0 It would be mean-minded not to be glad for Prince Harry and Meghan over the birth of their son Archie
0 It would be mean-minded not to be glad for Prince Harry and Meghan over the birth of their son Archie
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