Tag Archives: Buckingham Palace

Royal Riches: What the Monarchy Costs Great Britain

By Eamon Murphy

Royal finances: what the monarchy costs Great Britain

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AP/Lefteris Pitarakis

Here’s a paradox about Great Britain. In many ways, it’s a more progressive country than the United States, its colonial offspring. It has a more generous welfare state (including national health care), a more progressive tax structure, and a third major political party to the left of Labour. Most workers are entitled to at least 28 paid days of vacation per year, and same-sex marriage will soon be legal throughout England and Wales.

And yet Great Britain maintains one of the most conservative institutions on the planet: a hereditary monarchy, something Americans would never countenance. This despite the fact that King Charles I lost two civil wars, leading to his own decapitation and the short-lived abolition of the monarchy, in the mid-17th century.

And though the royal family’s political significance has long since been reduced to the ceremonial, the Windsors still have a massive financial footprint. As sovereign, the Queen owns the Crown Estate, a property portfolio worth £8.1 billion ($12.4 billion) as of last month — the first time its value has exceeded £8 billion. It includes a lot of prime real estate — “large parts of London’s West End,” “15 retail parks in various towns and cities,” shopping centers, offices, agricultural lands, forests, and “most UK coastline,” according to the BBC — and 15 percent of its annual revenues is used to fund the monarchy. The rest goes to the Treasury.

As a result of the these assets’ recent performance, the Queen is getting a raise: the Sovereign Grant, as her cut of the Crown Estate’s revenues is called, is set to increase next year from £36.1 million to £37.89 million (more than $55 million) — a gain of 5 percent, and the second consecutive bump to her allowance.

“The Crown Estate as a whole dates from the time of the Norman Conquest,” explains the monarchy’s official website — more than 900 years ago — but the current arrangement came into effect in 1760. That was the year King George III — the intolerable tyrant of the Declaration of Independence — signed the revenues over to the Treasury, and in return, stopped having to pay for the civil government, the national debt, and his own personal debt. Those expenses were covered by something called the Civil List, funded by the Treasury and supplemented more recently by grants from other departments, until the Sovereign Grant Act of 2011. Buckingham Palace called the change “a modern, transparent and simpler way of funding the head of state,” but opponents of the monarchy are unconvinced. “Pegging royal funding to Crown Estate revenue makes no sense at all,” said the group Republic, which advocates replacing the Queen (or King) with an elected head of state. “The two are not related. Crown Estate revenue has always been there to provide funds for the government.”

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Purple Taxis – Symbol Of Change

By Hilary Kramer, Contributor

Visitors to London and the people who live and work there are very familiar with the traditional and distinctively English black cabs. In London, these zippy taxis –combining old world charm with comfort, spaciousness and unique charm are a fixture, as much as Big Ben and Buckingham Palace. These black cabs and their polite and knowledge drivers are famous for getting the job done. Hailing one is easy, they are everywhere. These days, we are seeing images of these black cabs in  the media as  London is once again at the center of the global media’s attention given the birth of the future British monarch. …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Kate Middleton Labor: Duchess Of Cambridge Goes Into Labor With Royal Baby

By The Huffington Post News Editors

Kate Middleton has gone into labor!

Buckingham Palace confirms that the Duchess of Cambridge has been admitted to St Mary’s Hospital in Paddington, where she will give birth to her first child. In accordance with her pre-announced birth plan, Kate is being attended to by Dr. Marcus Setchell, the Queen’s former gynecologist, with Dr. Alan Farthing assisting.

St Mary’s Hospital is where Princess Diana gave birth to Princes William and Harry and where Princess Anne gave birth to her children. At this time, we don’t know the sex of the baby, as the duke and duchess chose not to find out before the birth. Despite previous reports that Kate is “too posh to push,” she’ll be having a natural birth.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Huffington Post

Wrong hospital? Media paranoia in UK royal baby wait

After more than two weeks camped outside St Mary’s Hospital in London, the media waiting for Prince William’s wife Catherine to give birth are having terrible thoughts — what if they are in the wrong place?

Camera crews, journalists and photographers have been staking out St Mary’s since the beginning of the month after royal officials revealed Catherine would have her baby there.

But as the days tick by with not so much as a royal corgi dog making an appearance, paranoia is setting in.

The Daily Telegraph newspaper on Thursday reported that the Duchess of Cambridge may instead give birth at the Royal Berkshire Hospital, near her parents’ home west of London.

The 31-year-old has been dividing her time in the past four or five weeks between her London base at Kensington Palace and the Middleton’s Bucklebury home, royal sources told AFP.

And the Telegraph noted that if she goes into labour while staying with her parents, the half-hour drive to the Royal Berkshire in Reading may be preferable to risking the 50-mile (80-kilometre) trip through the traffic to central London.

A spokesman for Buckingham Palace told AFP: “There are contingency plans for wherever the duchess might be in the country, and that has always been the case.”

The Royal Berkshire Hospital may be closer but as a purely National Health Service facility, it does not offer the same luxuries as St Mary’s.

Although St Mary’s is also run by the state-funded NHS, Catherine is booked into the private Lindo Wing, which offers plush suites and top quality cuisine.

No such facility exists at the Royal Berkshire, where — if she gives birth there — Catherine might end up staying on a post-labour ward with a number of other new mums.

The palace refused to confirm where the duchess has spent the past week since her reported due date on July 13, or to say whether William was with her.

But the spokesman confirmed the prince has not been at work in northwest Wales, where he is a search and rescue helicopter pilot, since the weekend.

“He’s not on shift,” he said.

Queen Elizabeth II on Wednesday revealed her impatience to meet her third great-grandchild, joking that she hoped it would arrive before she goes on holiday in Scotland next week.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Everyone is ready, but Britain's royal baby bides its time

The hospital is ready, the Wikipedia page and Twitter accounts are up and Britain’s famously creative press are running out of ideas. But Sunday arrived with no sign of the royal baby.

Prince William is filling the time until his wife Catherine goes into labour, playing polo, taking part in charity matches on Saturday and Sunday with his younger brother Harry.

He has taken a couple of days off from his work as a search and rescue helicopter pilot in Wales, a Buckingham Palace spokesman said, although he refused to say when the prince might be going back.

The palace has stayed tight-lipped about the birth of the new third in line to the throne, saying nothing for days other than to reiterate that Catherine is due some time in mid-July.

The press had pencilled in Saturday as the day, but bookmakers William Hill tipped Sunday as the likely due date, with Paddy Power offering equal odds on Sunday and Monday.

The only thing that is certain is that babies rarely come on time and that when this new heir to the Windsor dynasty arrives, the world will be ready.

In keeping with the digital age, the newborn already has its own page on Wikipedia, entitled “Child of the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge”, to use William and Kate’s formal titles.

Several spoof Twitter accounts have also been set up, with one, @RoyalFoetus, already claiming 5,500 followers. On June 19, it declared: “One is done with gestating.”

International media are camped outside St Mary’s Hospital in London where Catherine is due to give birth, and a row of parking spaces have been reserved by the royals outside the private Lindo Wing until the end of the month.

The Sunday Times newspaper reported that the 31-year-old’s gynaecologist, Marcus Setchell, will be given a police escort to hospital when she goes into labour.

It has previously been reported that Setchell had given up alcohol for several weeks in preparation for the birth.

In the absence of any proper news about the baby, such tidbits formed the bulk of the royal coverage in Britain’s normally hard-hitting Sunday newspapers.

The Sunday Express reported exclusively that Catherine had spent the weekend at her parents’ home in Berkshire, about 40 miles (65 kilometres) west of London.

Meanwhile the Mail on Sunday published a poll revealing that 53 percent of Britons think William and Catherine should not hire a nanny.

A further 56 percent think she should cut back significantly on her royal duties after the birth.

The paper said that palace officials expected Catherine to resume some public engagements in the autumn — provided of course, that the baby ever arrives.

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Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News

Kebede wins London Marathon amid tight security

Tsegaye Kebede claimed a second London Marathon title on Sunday, cheered through the streets by thousands of spectators reassured by enhanced security at the first major race since the twin bombings at the Boston event.

A race that started with tributes to the Boston victims with a moment of silence ended with a thrilling conclusion under clear blue skies.

With a black ribbon pinned to his chest, Kebede chased down Emmanuel Mutai in the closing stages, and overtook the tiring Kenyan to cross the line first in front of Buckingham Palace.

Kebede clocked 2 hours, 6 minutes and 15 seconds to emulate his 2010 triumph in London, while compatriot Ayele Abshero was third.

The victory in the British capital came after Kebede was denied a shot at glory here at the Olympics last year after being overlooked by Ethiopian selectors.

The women’s race saw Olympic silver medalist Priscah Jeptoo go one better in the annual London race.

The Kenyan cruised over the line in 2:20:15 seconds, the fastest time this year, ahead of compatriot Edna Kiplagat, while Yukiko Akaba of Japan was third.

It was a miserable day for Olympic champion Tiki Gelana, who finished 16th after seeing her hopes thwarted by a collision about a third of the way in.

The Ethiopian collided with Canadian wheelchair racer Josh Cassidy as she went to get a drink.

“Every year we come to overtake the women, there’s 10 chairs going at 20 mph and the poor women are scrambling to find their feet,” said Cassidy, who finished 20th. “I have a brand new $2,000 pair of wheels that are damaged, who’s going to pay for them? Things have to change.”

It was the one blot on a day marked by the defiance of athletes and spectators in the bright London sunshine in a difficult week for the athletics community.

The specter of the bombings near to the Boston Marathon finish line, which killed three people and injured more than 180, loomed in London.

And it was apt that Tatyana McFadden, who won the wheelchair race

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/mDDo_SiE3nM/

London Marathon runners offer tributes to Boston victims

The London Marathon started in defiant mood on a glorious sunny morning Sunday despite concerns raised by the bomb attacks on the Boston Marathon six days ago.

Thousands of runners offered tributes to those killed and injured in Boston. The race began after a dignified moment of silence for the victims in Boston, and many wore black armbands as a sign of solidarity.

“It means that runners are stronger than bombers,” said Valerie Bloomfield, a 40-year-old accountant from France just before she started the marathon.

Most participants said they weren’t worried by the Boston bombings, and the impressive turnout of enthusiastic fans lining the routes showed the same spirit, but one runner acknowledged an undercurrent of anxiety.

“It definitely affects us,” said Chris Denton, a 44-year-old engineer who was stretching his legs by the start line. He said he’d been concerned enough to ask that his family not come out to support him because of a possible copycat attack.

“I left them at home,” he said. “If only for my peace of mind.”

His friend, 45-year-old David Wilson, said there was no question of canceling the marathon. Londoners had come back onto the streets the day after the lethal July 7, 2005, transit system bombings and weren’t easily cowed.

“You can’t not do anything, because otherwise you’d stay on the outs all the time,” he said.

Moments before the majority of runners set off on the grinding race, announcer Geoff Wightman used the loudspeakers to ask for silence. He described marathon running as a global sport that unites runners and supporters in every continent in a spirit of friendship.

“This week the world marathon family was shocked and saddened by the events at the Boston Marathon,” he said. “In a few moments a whistle will sound and we will join together in silence to remember our friends and colleagues for whom a day of joy turned into a day of sadness.”

Blackheath, where the runners were gathered, fell silent. The only noise was the buzz of helicopters and the rumble of a distant truck.

Runner Martin Connell, 42, wore a picture of 8-year-old Boston bombing victim Martin Richard on his jersey in tribute to his young namesake.

“It’s a sign of peace and goodwill,” said the runner, an IT worker from near Liverpool.

Some 36,000 runners are expected to take part in the race, which also draws tens of thousands of spectators. Police said they planned to add 40 percent more officers and extra surveillance as a precautionary measure.

Security was plentiful but not intrusive near the finish line at the Mall in front of Buckingham Palace. It was mostly good-natured, as it was at the London Olympics.

Marathon staff, officials and media had their bags thoroughly checked as they entered security, which wasn’t deemed necessary at the event last year. Officials said this was in response to the Boston attack.

London‘s is the first major international marathon since the double bomb attack near the finish line in Boston, which left three people dead and more than 170 injured, including many who are still hospitalized. In

From: http://feeds.foxnews.com/~r/foxnews/world/~3/Ad5aMtIZxe8/

Margaret Thatcher’s Funeral To Be Held April 17

By The Huffington Post News Editors

LONDON — Queen Elizabeth II will be among the mourners at the funeral of former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher on April 17, officials announced Tuesday.

Buckingham Palace said the queen and her husband, Prince Philip, would attend the ceremony at St. Paul’s Cathedral, which is expected to draw dignitaries from around the world.

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Thatcher's ceremonial funeral to include full military honors

The British government says former Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher’s funeral will be held April 17.

Undertakers on Tuesday removed the ex-leader’s body from London’s Ritz Hotel, where she died Monday, amid preparations for a ceremonial funeral with full military honors.

A van carrying Thatcher’s casket left the hotel for an undisclosed location.

Officials say Thatcher’s funeral will be held with full military honors at St. Paul’s Cathedral. It is not technically a state funeral, which requires a vote in Parliament, but is the same level of honor given Princess Diana and the Queen Mother Elizabeth.

Thatcher’s coffin will lie overnight at the Houses of Parliament before the funeral, and then travel on a horse-drawn gun carriage to the cathedral along a route lined by military personnel.

“The Iron Lady” died at 87 after suffering a stroke.

“It is with great sadness that Mark and Carol Thatcher announced that their mother Baroness Thatcher died peacefully following a stroke this morning,” Thatcher spokesperson Lord Bell said Monday in a statement.

Thatcher led Britain’s Conservatives to three election victories from 1979 to 1990, the longest continuous period in office by a British prime minister since the early 19th century. Alongside former U.S. President Ronald Reagan, Thatcher battled against communism and saw the Berlin Wall get torn down in 1989.

“We have lost a great leader, a great prime minister and a great Briton,” British Prime Minister David Cameron said in a statement.

Tony Blair, a former British prime minister, said Thatcher had a vast impact on the world.

“Very few leaders get to change not only the political landscape of their country but of the world,” he said. “Margaret was such a leader.”

President Barack Obama said with Thatcher’s death, America has lost a “true friend,” while former President George W. Bush echoed Blair’s sentiment, calling Thatcher an “inspirational leader.”

Prime Minister Thatcher is a great example of strength and character, and a great ally who strengthened the special relationship between the United Kingdom and the United States,” Bush said in a statement.

Buckingham Palace said Queen Elizabeth II was sad to hear the news of Thatcher’s passing, adding that she would be sending a private message of sympathy to the family.

It said the funeral will be attended by a “wide and diverse range of people,” and the service will be followed by a private cremation.

During 11 bruising years as prime minister, Thatcher transformed her country by a ruthless dedication to free markets and infuriated European allies. She transferred large chunks of the economy from the state hands to private ownership.

“The problem with socialism is that eventually you run out of other people’s money,” she once said, according to Reuters.

To her fervent admirers, battling Maggie was an icon, a national savior who ended Britain’s post-World War II cycle of confrontation and decline — eclipsed as a 20th-century British leader only by Winston Churchill.

Her vehement critics, however, saw her as a bellicose figure at home and abroad, a destroyer of industries and, with it, a way of life.

She was a sharply divisive figure even within her Conservative …read more

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Margaret Thatcher's Economic Legacy Contested

By The Associated Press

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Terry O’Neill, Getty Images

LONDON (AP) – Love her or loathe her, one thing’s beyond dispute: Margaret Thatcher transformed Britain.

The Iron Lady, who ruled for 11 remarkable years, imposed her will on a fractious, rundown nation – breaking the unions, triumphing in a far-off war, and selling off state industries at a record pace. She left behind a leaner government and more prosperous nation by the time a mutiny ousted her from No. 10 Downing Street.

Thatcher’s spokesman, Tim Bell, said the former prime minister died from a stroke Monday morning at the Ritz hotel in London. Flags were flown at half-staff at Buckingham Palace, Parliament and Downing Street for the 87 year old. Queen Elizabeth II authorized Thatcher to have a ceremonial funeral – a step short of a state funeral – to be held at St. Paul’s Cathedral in London with military honors.

Prime Minister David Cameron cut short a trip to Madrid and Paris to return to Britain following news ofThatcher’s death, and his office confirmed that Thatcher would be cremated following the ceremonial funeral. It did not provide further details, saying only the arrangements were in line with the wishes ofThatcher’s family.

For admirers, Thatcher was a savior who rescued Britain from ruin and laid the groundwork for an extraordinary economic renaissance. For critics, she was a heartless tyrant who ushered in an era of greed that kicked the weak out onto the streets and let the rich become filthy rich.

“Let us not kid ourselves, she was a very divisive figure,” said Bernard Ingham, Thatcher’s press secretary for her entire term. “She was a real toughie. She was a patriot with a great love for this country, and she raised the standing of Britain abroad.”

Thatcher was the first – and still only – female prime minister in Britain’s history. But she often found feminists tiresome and was not above using her handbag as a prop to underline her swagger and power. A grocer’s daughter, she rose to the top of Britain’s snobbish hierarchy the hard way, and envisioned a classless society that rewarded hard work and determination.

She was a trailblazer who at first believed trailblazing impossible: Thatcher told the Liverpool Daily Post in 1974 that she did not think a woman would serve as party leader or prime minister during her lifetime.

But once in power, she never showed an ounce of doubt.

Thatcher could be intimidating to those working for her: British diplomats sighed with relief on her first official visit to Washington, D.C., as prime minister to find that she was relaxed enough to enjoy a glass of whiskey and a half-glass of wine during an embassy lunch, according to official documents.

Like her close friend and political ally Ronald Reagan, Thatcher seemed motivated by an unshakable belief that free markets would build a better country …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Animal rights group slams 'cruel' pigeon races

An animal rights group may ruffle royal feathers with its call for Queen Elizabeth II to stop supporting pigeon racing because the sport is cruel.

People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals claims tens of thousands of birds die during pigeon races across the English Channel. It says it conducted an undercover investigation which found that in some races 75 percent of the birds disappear and are presumed dead.

PETA says it has written to the queen asking her to review her association with the sport.

Elizabeth is patron of the Royal Pigeon Racing Association and keeps several hundred racing pigeons on her Sandringham estate in eastern England.

Buckingham Palace declined to comment Thursday.

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Recovering Queen Skips Another Service

By Matt Cantor Still on the mend after a brief hospitalization, Queen Elizabeth won’t make it to a celebration of the British Commonwealth today, CNN reports. Still, her health issues are “nothing to fret about,” says a Buckingham Palace insider, and in another ceremony tonight, she’ll sign a historic document opposing discrimination throughout… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Newser – Home

Queen Elizabeth II Hospitalized With Gastroenteritis

Queen Elizabeth II has been admitted to hospital with a stomach bug, Buckingham Palace informed yesterday. A palace spokesperson said she was admitted to King Edward VII Hospital with symptoms of gastroenteritis. According to Buckingham Palace, the Queen has been hospitalized as a precaution, while an assessment of the symptoms of her gastroenteritis is made… …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Medical News Today

Police Taser man outside Buckingham Palace

British police say they have arrested and used a stun gun on a man armed with two knives outside Buckingham Palace.

Scotland Yard said the man, thought to be in his 50s, acted aggressively when challenged by police outside the gates of the heavily touristed landmark on Sunday. Officers used a Taser gun on him and took him to a London police station.

The man was not named and police did not provide details of his identity.

Parts of the area outside the palace gates, usually crowded with tourists, were cordoned off. No injuries were reported.

Queen Elizabeth II and her husband Prince Philip were at their country retreat, Sandringham Estate, on Sunday. The palace declined to comment on the incident.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Fox World News