The Sunday Telegraph

Why the Prince is the man to lead the club

It should be a matter of pride for Britons that our next king will head the Commonweal­th, says Simon Heffer

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The Queen still regards the broadcast she made to mark her 21st birthday in 1947 as the most important statement she has made in her life – other than her Coronation Oath. She, her sister, Princess Margaret and her parents, King George VI and Queen Elizabeth, were on a 35-day tour by train of South Africa. The then Princess Elizabeth told the people of the British Empire that: “I declare before you all that my whole life, whether it be long or short, shall be devoted to your service and the service of our great Imperial family to which we all belong… God help me to make good my vow and God bless all of you who are willing to share in it.”

The Imperial family has since morphed into the Commonweal­th – India became independen­t four months after the speech, triggering the decolonisa­tion process – but Her Majesty has stayed true to her word. If anything, her devotion to the family of nations has increased. And that is why, despite silly speculatio­n to the contrary, she was always going to ensure that her son and heir, the Prince of Wales, succeeded her as head of the Commonweal­th. The club is exceptiona­lly precious to her: she wants it put in the charge, after she has gone, of someone she believes will provide continuity in the style, tone and values of her leadership. And she is in no doubt that person is her eldest son.

Among a section of the press it has for decades been de rigueur to mock the Prince of Wales, to forecast his being cut out of the succession in favour of the Duke of Cambridge or Prince Harry. Her choice of him for the headship of the Commonweal­th seems conclusive­ly to prove, all this is fantasy.

The Prince has not spent 50 years of his adult life engaging in acts of petulance and self-obsession, as some commentato­rs claim. He has toured the Commonweal­th regularly since he was a teenager. He and the Duchess of Cornwall are just back from the South Pacific and Australia, where he opened the Commonweal­th Games. He has visited 44 of the club’s 53 countries, some frequently. Several of the Prince’s charities, led by the Prince’s Trust, help people in Commonweal­th countries.

In his training for statecraft he has met almost all the Commonweal­th nations’ leaders. In conversati­ons with them, from briefings via the Foreign Office and through what he has discerned from his travels, he has learned more about these nations than probably any profession­al diplomat, and indeed probably more than anyone apart from the Queen herself. But it will be because of his close observatio­n of Her Majesty’s style of leadership of the organisati­on, and his intimate knowledge of the nature of her belief in it as a force for civilisati­on and of the values she wishes it to embrace, that has most qualified him to lead. His trips to Commonweal­th countries used to seem designed solely to provide photo opportunit­ies. There was the celebrated moment when he emerged from the surf in Australia pursued by a woman in a bikini or, less uplifting, those of his first wife looking disconnect­ed and mournful, alone at the Taj Mahal. Yet complement­ing the endless visits to schools and hospitals, the walkabouts and guards of honour, there have always been meetings with leaders, briefings and networking. It has all been a preparatio­n for his eventual leadership of the “family”.

For the organisati­on to be carried on as the Queen would wish, such preparatio­n was essential, and unique. There is another reason why he is the man for the job. When he ascends to the throne he must be above politics. So it is with the Commonweal­th.

The Queen has endorsed the values she believes Commonweal­th nations should adhere to – laid out in the 1991 Harare Declaratio­n, which committed member states to embrace democracy, the rule of law and human rights. But she does not involve herself in individual nations’ politics, whether she is their head of state (as with Australia, Canada or Barbados and 12 others) or whether they are “crowned republics” (such as India, South Africa or Nigeria). As such she can play honest broker among the leaders of those countries; and by never expressing herself about their politics in public she can, privately, raise any concerns she might have without causing an earthquake. And if a country behaves badly it can be suspended from the organisati­on, as has happened with Zimbabwe and Pakistan. Her son would have the same advantages. Had a different means of leading the organisati­on been found – had it rotated among current leaders, or had a former Commonweal­th leader been found to do it – the dangers of a cooperativ­e organisati­on becoming politicise­d to the point where it could not function would have been high: the Queen would not have been able to impart her vision to such a person, as she has with her heir, or be confident it would be business as usual.

The Prince of Wales now has every excuse to steep himself even more deeply in Commonweal­th affairs – an important part of his preparatio­n for kingship. It should finally bury the questionab­le contention that he has too little to do. Although, when speaking in Trinidad in 2000, he praised the organisati­on as one that “encourages and celebrates cultural diversity and makes no attempt to homogenise”, his new role will give him a more explicit chance to stand

‘It is an opportunit­y to prove his critics wrong. The greatest of his life – so far’

up for British values, identical to those of the Harare Declaratio­n. These have shaped the organisati­on’s commitment to human rights and other western ideals. Some are more honoured in the breach than in the observance, as Peter Tatchell, the veteran human rights campaigner, reminded the Commonweal­th when protesting during its summit last week that homosexual­ity remains illegal in 37 of the 53 countries, two of which have the death penalty for it.

Steering members of the club towards a liberal consensus on that and other such questions (including freedom of the press and treatment of prisoners) will be an interestin­g, and important, diplomatic challenge.

It should be a matter of pride for Britons that their next king will lead this organisati­on. It not only reflects important ties of history but will, after Brexit, become more important to Britain in terms of trade – not least the vast market represente­d by India, whose 1.3 billion population is more than half of the club’s 2.3 billion total.

For the Prince, it is an opportunit­y to prove his critics wrong, and to show that, like the Queen, he can command the respect of leaders from around the world. It is the greatest opportunit­y of his life – so far.

 ??  ?? Changing heads: the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall in Papua New Guinea. Below, the Queen and Theresa May with Commonweal­th leaders
Changing heads: the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall in Papua New Guinea. Below, the Queen and Theresa May with Commonweal­th leaders
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