


And last year Charles’ brother, Prince Andrew, reached a legal settlement with a woman who accused him of abusing her as a minor.Ĭharles and his retinue will be keenly aware of these existential threats to his tenure. The messy departure of Prince Harry and Meghan came amid a flurry of racism allegations. Scandal has plagued the royals again in recent years. What place does this opulent pomp have in a country suffering one of the worst cost-of-living crises in the industrialized world? Should multicultural Britain still have its king act as “supreme head” of the Church of England? Will Charles stop wading into democratic politics? And should a white, multimillionaire British king, chosen by the lottery of birth, remain as head of state in former colonies such as Jamaica and Grenada, where Britain built its empire upon the institution of slavery? Shorn of the queen’s unique grandmotherly brand, some of the persistent questions and deep-seated criticisms of the monarchy have come to the fore: “He’s got to prove that the monarchy is legitimate.” King Charles III inspects the 200th Sovereign's parade at Royal Military Academy Sandhurst on April 14 in Camberley, England. “Charles has a very different challenge facing him,” historian and author Helen Carr said. And now that she’s not around, polls suggest the prevailing mood ahead of Charles’ coronation is one of apathy, especially among young people. Charles is far less popular than his late mother, Queen Elizabeth II. For many, the invitation jars awkwardly with reality: There are more questions hanging over the new monarch and indeed the Windsor family itself than at any point in living memory.
