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Why Prince William will have to give up privacy of Forest Lodge when he becomes King.

 

Why Prince William will have to give up privacy of Forest Lodge when he becomes King: Royal author CHRISTOPHER WILSON reveals just how naïve Prince's dream of 'forever home' is.

He said that Forest Lodge was to be the family's 'forever home', but as he prepares for kingship, Prince William is being forced to face the realities of becoming monarch. And that includes moving house - again.

With King Charles's shock announcement last week that he'll never move into Buckingham Palace, traditionalists cling to the hope that William will follow in the footsteps of previous monarchs and take up residence in the world's most famous palace.

But one former courtier I spoke to this weekend told me that with Charles's announcement last week, 'the spell is broken'.

'Buckingham Palace will forever remain the symbol of monarchy, but this now clears the way for the prince never to live there. Times change and so will people's expectations.'

William's namesake King William IV hated Buckingham Palace so much he refused to move in - 'a most ill-contrived house' he thundered - suggesting it be converted into army barracks or handed over for use as an alternative House of Commons.

He wasn't much keener on Windsor Castle - and had to be forced to take up residence there because the public expected it.

The ex-courtier warned that William will have to follow suit. 'Obviously, he means Forest Lodge to be a secluded family home for him, his wife and children, and that's entirely understandable. 

'But Windsor Castle was built by William the Conqueror and our Royal Family has lived there ever since - whatever the prince's plans for modernising the monarchy, that's one thing he can't get around.

'Buckingham Palace has been occupied by the royals for 200 years, and you can see it's outgrown its appropriateness as a home. Windsor, on the other hand, has been lived in for a thousand years.'

The pressure on William to deliver what the public wants and expects of him has never been greater, and he knows that while he's trying desperately to streamline the monarchy to fit its reduced numbers, he can't ignore public opinion.

A report at the weekend showed that the Royal Family has halved its workload but more than tripled its taxpayer funding since the controversial Sovereign Grant was introduced in 2012.

As an indication of goodwill, William and his father, King Charles, have been obliged to declare the tax they pay to show they're giving value for money. 

But as the report concluded, while last year the royals undertook 2,273 public engagements, in 2012 the total was nearly twice as many at 4,127.

'In part, the workload has dropped because the number of working royals has fallen from 15 to 11,' the report continued. 

'It's also declined because of age, illness, and the fact that the Prince and Princess of Wales, who take off around 16 weeks per year with their children, focus on a more campaigning style of monarchy rather than traditional ribbon-cutting duties.'

Its message - don't expect to see more of Kate and William on the street because that's not how they're going to 'do' monarchy - implies that if we're to see less of them, the foundation-stones shouldn't be mucked about with. 

That includes all the full-dress panoply of State Banquets, Trooping the Colour, Garden Parties and other such events that have to remain in place. 

And that the public, less often able to see William and Kate, will in return expect them to be seen in Buckingham Palace and Windsor Castle - nothing less will do.

That means that the future King William can't expect to reign from a secluded country house an hour away from the capital city, the former official told me. 

'The Palace is the royal engine-room, with sometimes up to 800 people working there daily - courtiers, officials, secretaries and all the people who keep the monarchy in the public eye.

'William can't expect his private secretary or his valet to hop in a cab and drive all the way out to Forest Lodge when he calls. He has to be able to come into the office, just as Queen Elizabeth used to do every day while she reigned.

'That means he'll need a handy London home very close to the Palace - just like Charles has at Clarence House.'

At present, William and Kate have the use of the colossal 20-room Apartment 1a at Kensington Palace, but though they use 'KP' as the address in their daily engagement reports in the Court Circular, the couple are rarely seen there these days.

'When he succeeds to the throne, William can't be crisscrossing busy London streets in rush hour with numerous security vehicles and motorbike outriders in tow - KP is two miles from Buckingham Palace, and the traffic between the two is probably the worst in Britain,' I was told. 'He'll need to be much nearer to the office.'

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