Why the Monarchy Still Matters

It ties Britain to a powerful past—and could help lead it into the future
By Matt Cantor,  Newser Staff
Posted Apr 29, 2011 1:25 PM CDT
Royal Wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton: Why the British Monarchy Still Matters
Britain's Prince William, right, and Kate, Duchess of Cambridge wave on the balcony of Buckingham Palace after their wedding service at Westminster Abbey in London Friday, April, 29, 2011.   (AP Photo/Lefteris Pitarakis)

On a day like today, even someone with misgivings about the British monarchy has to feel a little pride. The empire is gone; Britain’s global reach has rapidly diminished; but once again, all eyes were on London—perhaps a billion pairs, according to some counts, writes Philip Stephens in the Financial Times. The monarchy provides a living link to Britain’s grand past—and it can carry the country into a challenging future.

“Not everything has been lost to history,” he writes. Just look at the wedding, full of global leaders (though not all of them “salubrious”). “What has been left to Britain by empire is a global outlook,” writes Stephens. “The sense that Britain still has ties, interests, and, yes, responsibilities thousands of miles beyond its shores is an enduring and worthwhile legacy.” Now, the royals, like Britain itself, “must adapt to straitened circumstance,” he writes. “Britain’s future lies in staying interested in the world. The monarchy’s best hope is to remain interesting to the world.” (More royal wedding stories.)

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