The statements from Liz Truss and Keir Starmer about the Queen's death sum up establishment feeling about her. For the new Prime Minister, "Queen Elizabeth II was the rock on which modern Britain was built." For the Leader of the Opposition, "Above the clashes of politics, she stood not for what the nation fought over, but what it agreed upon. As Britain changed rapidly around her, this dedication became the still point of our turning world." Variations on a theme. The Queen was constant and forever, and her end was unimaginable because very few people now living were adults when she ascended the throne. For both party leaders, their statements were well pitched because their sentiments are shared by millions of people.
Two days' worth of coverage bears this out as journos hang around Buckingham Palace doing their vox pops. For most, she was distant but close. The Queen enjoyed a luxurious life removed from the lives of those who looked up to her, but that she stared out of the television screens, newspapers, and the occasional photo portrait hanging on the wall meant her presence was felt. And even though the Queen abided by saying and doing nothing apart from the endless round of official engagements, all the while the palace commanded the most sophisticated spinners - aided by the popular media's fawning deference - to weave a narrative of duty, conscientiousness, and loyalty about her person. Even The Crown, the Netflix drama deemed scandalous by self-appointed Royal guardians, reinforces the message. And these impressions stuck even more over the last year. We've watched the Queen become more frail as she carried on her responsibilities even after the passing of Philip. For millions of people, this is what service and dedication looks like.
Which then presents something of an anomaly. Go back 18 months, and there is arguably less state-mandated disruption than was the case following the Duke of Edinburgh's passing. There's certainly more absurdity, with everything from catalogue shops, gay porn websites, and McDonald's self-service counters paying tribute to the Queen. Think They Live, but with every screen and paper carrying Elizabeth II's image. But there are also more avenues of escape. In April 2021 the BBC cleared everything and cancelled programming. In September 2022, BBC1 and ITV1 are wall-to-wall official mourning but everything else is running almost normally. Yours truly was able to enjoy Haddaway, Take That, and Kim Wilde on the Top of the Pops 1993 reruns as scheduled. This is in marked difference to the response to the death of Princess Diana 25 years ago. Granted, her death was sudden and unexpected, but all five terrestrial channels were stuffed full of Diana coverage and tributes for over a fortnight. There was no streaming, and the internet at this point covered fewer than nine per cent of households. There was no escape via the usual means of escapism.
From the state's point of view, the death of the reigning monarch is a bigger deal. Effectively, its official corporate personality and person changes over night and with it the official pomp and apparatuses of spectacle have to be tweaked. Seldom used constitutional gears grind into action, and well rehearsed rituals get underway. But in 2022 it comes with a dollop of uncertainty. Perhaps one of the reasons why broadcast media are more restrained than 18 months ago is because of the backlash it provoked. Complaints to the BBC over the cancellation of programming was a rude reminder to the establishment that there are a lot of people out there who don't share any enthusiasm for the Royals as people and the monarchy as an institution - even it shocks them even more because the indifferent are never reflected in the coverage. Perhaps somewhere, someone has learned imposing grief is not a good idea when popular trust in state institutions is low. That said, the mass cancellation of football matches, festivals, and Southwark recycling centre's open day aren't going to help.
But the other consideration is the growing republican or, to be more precise, anti-monarchical sentiment - something that became even more evident during the Platinum jubilee celebrations. Polling puts republican views at an all-time high. Still miles behind monarchical support, but with an institution accustomed to thinking about its stability in terms of decades and centuries the trend should give royalists some pause. Because the relations that secured the monarchy in the post-war period have corroded, with many communities giving way to privatised individuation, a more atomised population requires more direct messaging to try and induce desired behaviours. Hence the enforced mourning and the multiplication of the Queen's image and the rote repeat of hard work, service, faith, duty. Because it clearly works as millions back the monarchy the solution to winning over the doubters and the haters is double down and ideologically bludgeon its real and imagined opponents.
For the last eight years, official politics has been on a roller coaster. Certainties and eternal truths were found to be nothing of the sort. Because Charles III takes up the throne without the same support or affection enjoyed by his mother, that adds to the worry that change could descend quickly here and, as if taken by a thief in the night, the institution's legitimacy vanishes in the blink of an eye. The passing of the Queen marks something. Not the end of a second glorious Elizabethan age, but the entering of a new period: one in which no amount official days of mourning can hide that with her gone, it has to meet the uncertainties ahead without its most stalwart and respected advocate.
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As we enter full North Korea mode for the next 10 days you can feel the fear amongst the estaablishment that they wont be able to prevent real questions about our constitution being raised.
ReplyDeleteNot only about the monarchy but also about the rest of of it - the unelected second house with its 20 clerics, the inequality and nepotism that inherited power justifies.
The fear that Charles will blow it by contining to campaign for his pet causes or be found accepting more suitcases of cash from foriegn despots.
Hence all the interviews and pundits procaliming "well all loved the queen" and the certainity that "Charles will be a good king".
Hence the halt to football incase the kop stray of script.
For both party leaders, their statements were well pitched because their sentiments are shared by millions of people.
ReplyDeleteMaybe. I wonder how many people share Jeremy Corbyn's sentiments as expressed on Twitter - that she was a nice old lady and it's a shame she's gone, particularly for her family. I guess we'll never find out now.
Meanwhile, the TUC postpones its annual Conference, and ALL the unions put their current strike programmes on hold ! And of course the bosses suspend their ever escalating attacks on our wages, working conditions - and banditry in shovelling ever greater profits into their pockets - or maybe not. The craven behaviour of Labour's groveller Leadership (eg, that former long time staunch fake Republican, Starmer), and the TUC is just a foretaste of their betrayals to come. When has the TUC or Labour EVER not betrayed the working class when it came to the crunch - from the 1926 General Strike, the 1984 Miners Strike, and onwards it goes. Always the final betrayal, and always with the excuse of the primacy of 'the National Interest'. Without a mass , mainly working class composed, socialist party of a very radical hue we are seriously in trouble. And there isn't a scintilla of a sign of such a party in the wings unfortunately, and what passes for the 'Left' today are actually just idealist (in a philosophical sense) middle class Left Liberals - with a raft of disjointed, often contradictory, ideas which in some cases actually defy science and logic, and certainly have nothing to do with socialist materialist theory and class struggle politics. We are all soooooo screwed
ReplyDelete«The Queen enjoyed a luxurious life removed from the lives of those who looked up to her»
ReplyDeleteThe lifestyle of one of many minor property multimillionaires like her.
«the inequality and nepotism that inherited power justifies.»
Not much power, because the politicians who exercise power make sure the sovereign does not exercise it.
But the monarchy is the prime symbol of “inequality and nepotism that inherited” property gives, and that is *very popular* with a large and electorally important part of voters.
A lot of voters want more inequality (in their favour of course) and want more nepotism by inheritance (even if "just" of £1m 3 bed semis in the south-east). They want from that a comfortable life of rentierism far removed from the lives of those proles who serve them.
A funny four-eyes guy once wrote of "cultural hegemony" and of "the general class", and that for the UK in the past 40 years that has meant rentierism and the property and finance rentier class, and the queen was their symbol.
The monarchy in England is less vestigial than in other european countries because of that, and the rise to power of the industrial bourgeoisie has been at least partially rolled back thanks to thatcherism.
One hopeful point that comes to mind is that the new King for many years put a lot of energy into supporting organic farming, energy conservation, and human-scale architecture. It’s just possible that he’s come to the throne at the right time, and can remind the new government that, you know, there’s something you can do when you have an energy shortage other than bluster and whine…
ReplyDelete«But the monarchy is the prime symbol of “inequality and nepotism that inherited” property gives, and that is *very popular* with a large and electorally important part of voters.»
ReplyDeleteSome USA sources marvel that many usians are taken with the UK royal family (and there are many popular Hollywood movies about princesses etc.), but that is easily understandable: the royal family are indeed the symbol of "passive income", of the dream of many usians, not just many "Middle England" britishers, to live splendidly from inherited wealth and status as gentry if not gentlefolk, Jane Austen style.
"One hopeful point that comes to mind is that the new King for many years put a lot of energy into supporting organic farming, energy conservation, and human-scale architecture. It’s just possible that he’s come to the throne at the right time, and can remind the new government that, you know, there’s something you can do when you have an energy shortage other than bluster and whine…"
ReplyDeleteAdded to this are the new King's very recent comments regarding the Rwanda deportation scheme - the more Tory discomfort the better.
"Meanwhile, the TUC postpones its annual Conference, and ALL the unions put their current strike programmes on hold!"
ReplyDeleteHowever, the Stock Exchange remains open despite the death of the long -serving CEO of 'The Firm'.
Edinburgh Dumbiedykes council estate just across the roqd from the Parliament - been painted since and a high wall was built at the same time the Parliament was built at the side of the Parliament. Just one of the 'council estates' in Edinburgh- Muirhouse, Niddire, Wester Hailes etc. That houses mostly thousands of poor working people.
ReplyDeleteOlwen