Friday, 4 Oct 2024

Queen backs Camilla in Platinum Jubilee message shaping future of monarchy

Elizabeth II has used her Platinum Jubilee message to back the Duchess of Cornwall as Queen, shaping the future of the monarchy on her historic milestone.

In the hugely significant intervention, the 95-year-old monarch expressed her ‘sincere wish’ that Camilla, who began an affair with Charles when he was still married to Princess Diana, will be known as Queen Consort when her husband becomes King.

Experts branded the message ‘extraordinary’ and said it showed the Queen’s determination to future-proof a monarchy she has spent the last 70 years serving.

The Queen, using the rarest of Jubilees to put her affairs in order on a public platform, also shared her succession support for her eldest son.

She said in the written message: ‘I would like to express my thanks to you all for your support. I remain eternally grateful for, and humbled by, the loyalty and affection that you continue to give me.

‘And when, in the fullness of time, my son Charles becomes King, I know you will give him and his wife Camilla the same support that you have given me; and it is my sincere wish that, when that time comes, Camilla will be known as Queen Consort as she continues her own loyal service.’


Charles and Camilla were ‘touched and honoured’ by the Queen’s gesture, Clarence House said.

The prince will make his own public declaration on Sunday celebrating his mother’s Jubilee.

Camilla would technically have been Queen when Charles acceded to the throne, and only legislation would have prevented it.

But royal aides insisted, when she married Charles in 2005, that Camilla did not want to be Queen and said originally that the former Mrs Parker Bowles ‘intended’ to be known instead as Princess Consort – the first in British history – instead.

But the careful use of the verb ‘to intend’ left this open to change in the future.

Any mention of ‘Princess Consort’ was removed from Charles’s website during a revamp in 2018.


Much has changed in the years since Charles, who aides once said had no intention of remarrying, wed his long term love.

Camilla’s public image has been transformed after she was initially cast as the third person in the Prince and Princess of Wales’ marriage, before becoming a campaigning member of the monarchy prepared to serve the nation.

Camilla was blamed for the breakdown of the prince’s marriage to Diana, Princess of Wales, and when news of their affair first came to light, she faced vitriolic criticism.

Underneath, those closest to her say she was a down-to-earth Sussex girl who grew up with a love of horses and happened to fall for a prince.

During the 17 years she has been married to Charles, the duchess has grown into her role and is now an assured royal host when staging events at Clarence House and a confident representative of the Queen when invited to foreign lands.

She is patron or supporter of a number of literacy charities, speaks out in support of victims of domestic violence and champions several animal welfare organisations.

But her most significant role is supporting the prince and being the comforting presence at home that enables him to take on the role of heir to the throne.

With the Queen setting out her wishes and calling for people to support Charles and Camilla, the duchess will undoubtedly be crowned alongside the prince at his coronation when the time comes.

The Queen, who acceded to the throne on February 6 1952 on the death of her father George VI, also renewed her lifelong pledge of duty in her Platinum Jubilee message to the nation.

‘As we mark this anniversary, it gives me pleasure to renew to you the pledge I gave in 1947 that my life will always be devoted to your service,’ she said.

She also paid tribute to her late husband the Duke of Edinburgh for the sacrifices he made as consort as she thanked her family for their support. 

The Queen wrote: ‘I am fortunate to have had the steadfast and loving support of my family. I was blessed that in Prince Philip I had a partner willing to carry out the role of consort and unselfishly make the sacrifices that go with it.

‘It is a role I saw my own mother perform during my father’s reign.’

Former BBC royal correspondent Peter Hunt said: ‘This is the most extraordinary message. The Queen is ensuring the transition, when it comes, to her son as king is as seamless and trouble free as possible.

‘She’s future proofing an institution she’s served for seventy years. And for Camilla, the journey from being the third person in a marriage to queen-in-waiting, is complete.’

On the eve of her Platinum Jubilee, the Queen was on ‘sparkling’ form as she laughed and joked at a celebratory reception at Sandringham House.

The head of state cut a Jubilee cake, met members of the local Women’s Institute and chatted to former cookery school student Angela Wood who helped to perfect the famous coronation chicken dish served to guests after her 1953 Coronation ceremony.

Wearing an Angela Kelly wedgwood blue crepe with white brocade dress, the Queen, who beamed with delight throughout, used a wooden walking stick to rest on and also carried her trademark black handbag.

The Queen was aptly wearing glittering platinum jewellery – The Nizam of Hyderabad Rose brooches – given to her as part of a diamond tiara set when she married Philip in 1947.

Yvonne Browne, vice-president and chairman of the Sandringham WI, described the Queen as being on ‘sparkling’ form.

In her message, the Queen also reflected on the sad anniversary of the death of her father.

‘It is a day that, even after 70 years, I still remember as much for the death of my father, King George VI, as for the start of my reign,’ she said.

The Queen, who signed the message ‘Your servant Elizabeth R’, pledged to continue to ‘serve you with all my heart.’

She spoke of looking forward to the rest of her Jubilee year, writing: ‘As I look ahead with a sense of hope and optimism to the year of my Platinum Jubilee, I am reminded of how much we can be thankful for.

‘These last seven decades have seen extraordinary progress socially, technologically and culturally that have benefitted us all; and I am confident that the future will offer similar opportunities to us and especially to the younger generations in the United Kingdom and throughout the Commonwealth.’

She acknowledged the challenges faced by the nation during the pandemic, saying she hoped the Jubilee would ‘bring together families and friends, neighbours and communities – after some difficult times for so many of us’. 

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