Mon. Dec 23rd, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

While Buckingham Palace trying to play down the King’s cancer diagnosis — their opaque version of transparency revealed the health issue, but not the type of cancer nor the required treatment — there is a flaw in the royal “keep calm and carry on” credo.

Whatever happens next, the consequences are significant in both the short and long term.

Of course, everyone wants King Charles III to make a full recovery — even the Australian Republican Movement sent well wishes — and British Prime Minister Rishi Sunak’s comment that the cancer has been “caught early” is very welcome news. But statistics tell us that cancer diagnoses have less successful outcomes the older we get and at 75, the King is just five years off the age when survival rates are at their lowest.

While it is wholly inappropriate to engage in wild conjecture about the King’s private health matters and the palace has urged reporters not to go down that road, this is the sovereign we are talking about.

It’s a singular job with pre-determined stand-ins, so health aside, it’s surely important to consider what will happen next.

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A small team of stand-ins

For the moment, the King is still carrying out his constitutional duties — the necessary government business that comes daily in red boxes and requires thorough scrutiny.

He is also remaining in contact with the UK prime minister for their regular schedule of one-on-one chats and hopes to add other important meetings to his private diary. But public-facing engagements are not possible until he has completed his treatment and doctors have approved a return to work.

Some of those engagements could fall on the shoulders of other members of the working royal family, actually a pretty small team, especially when you consider the Princess of Wales is at home recuperating following abdominal surgery and won’t be returning to work until after Easter.

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