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Charles won’t drop pet projects when he’s crowned King

No more jibes at ‘monstrous carbuncles’ or rows about homeopathy and farming. But...

By KATE MANSEY ASSISTANT EDITOR

THE Prince of Wales will resist calls to abandon his pet projects when he becomes King, The Mail on Sunday understands.

Instead he will find new ways to champion favourite causes, throwing open Royal palaces and ‘bringing people together to find solutions’.

One insider described it as a plan to be ‘a convenor King rather than a campaigner King’. Significantly, it appears he has agreed not to be outspoken or to court controversy.

It is said the Prince summed up his new approach during a meeting in the Canadian capital of Ottawa on Wednesday with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Mark Carney, the former governor of the Bank of England. ‘Even if people just turn up to see what it’s like inside my house, they may then stay to solve the problems that we face,’ he told them.

Charles has been criticised for his strong views on subjects such as architecture, homeopathy, organic food and traditional farming methods, and some have questioned how his opinions will fit with the impartiality required of the monarch.

It seems, however, that his future interventions will have a focus on ‘listening rather than speaking’.

A Royal source said: ‘He never gives up on issues and keeps going back to people to find out what progress has been made.

‘But this is the distinction: not solving problems himself but listening to people’s concerns and bringing others together to solve them.’

That is likely to lead to a different style of monarchy from the Queen’s – a record-breaking reign in which few people have ever heard her personal views.

It also marks a departure for Charles, who has earned both admiration and criticism for interventions such as describing a proposed extension to the National Gallery as ‘a monstrous carbuncle’.

He will, however, maintain the networks of friendship he has built up. The source continued: ‘The Prince has relationships that go back a long way – some of the indigenous leaders he met in Canada are people he’s been speaking to for decades. His mother was much younger when she came to the Throne, but he has had a lifetime as a Royal.’

Another insider said: ‘We know what the Prince thinks about various subjects, so there’s no possibility of putting the genie back in the bottle. What he chooses to say will be very important, yet he can still be bold enough to make an impact but do it very skilfully.’

Last week’s three-day Canadian tour provided the biggest sign yet of how he would perform his duties. It was notable, for instance, that he used a flight to Yellowknife in the Northwest Territories to make changes to a farewell speech so as to acknowledge the suffering of indigenous children in Anglican Residential Schools. Aides revealed that what had been planned as ‘a few remarks’ was transformed into a strongly worded statement.

Charles had earlier met survivors as Canada nears the first anniversary of the discovery of hundreds of unmarked children’s graves.

His approach was welcomed, with one leader telling him: ‘You must have been indigenous in another life because you understand us.’

The Prince also privately presented chiefs from the Dettah community with two bird boxes, handmade at his Highgrove estate, so they can track native wildlife.

A source said that the Prince, who has found common ground with the Elders on their passion for the environment, has arranged to follow up with the community to see if the boxes work.

It is thought that much of this soft diplomacy will continue when he becomes King – behind the scenes and away from the cameras.

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2022-05-22T07:00:00.0000000Z

2022-05-22T07:00:00.0000000Z

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