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What is UK's first King's Speech in 70 years and Charles' first all about
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  • What is UK's first King's Speech in 70 years and Charles' first all about

What is UK's first King's Speech in 70 years and Charles' first all about

Ajeyo Basu • November 7, 2023, 10:47:02 IST
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The King’s Speech, not the Queen’s, will open Parliament for the first time since 1951. Throughout her 70-year reign, Elizabeth gave 67 speeches; she only skipped two because she was pregnant and asked Charles to read the speech on her behalf in May 2022

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What is UK's first King's Speech in 70 years and Charles' first all about

An official known as Black Rod, a diamond-encrusted crown, and yeomen of the guard are all components of Britain’s State Opening of Parliament, an occasion where traditional customs and contemporary politics collide. King Charles III will deliver the King’s Speech, a list of proposed laws drafted by the Conservative government in the United Kingdom and intended to win over voters before the nation’s general election next year, on Tuesday while seated atop a gilded throne. As part of a centuries-old tradition, the king is carrying out a role that his late mother, Queen Elizabeth II, fulfilled for seven decades and that other British monarchs carried out before her. Every four or five years, elections are held in Britain, and the government’s term is divided into roughly yearly sessions of Parliament. Each starts with a lavish State Opening ceremony, in which the monarch and legislators represent the struggle between the Crown and Parliament that led to the creation of the British constitutional monarchy. Scarlet-clad guardsmen search Parliament’s cellars for explosives at the start of the day, a reference to the 1605 Gunpowder Plot, in which rebel Roman Catholics led by Guy Fawkes attempted to blow up the structure housing Protestant King James I. After that, Charles will walk the mile (1.6 kilometres) to Parliament from Buckingham Palace. To guarantee the king’s safe return, a lawmaker will be sent to the palace as a symbolic hostage. Since his attempted arrest of MPs in 1642, when he was overthrown, put on trial, and executed by beheading, the king has been prohibited from entering the House of Commons. Thus, the unelected upper house of Parliament, the House of Lords, hosts the opening ceremony. The Lady (or Gentleman) Usher of the Black Rod, a security official, will be dispatched to the Commons to call for lawmakers, who will slam the door in her face as a sign of their independence. Following Black Rod, Sarah Clarke, and her staff’s three knocks on the door, legislators ploddingly stroll and converse their way towards the House of Lords. When they do, they find themselves standing at the rear of a chamber filled with numerous Lords wearing scarlet robes trimmed with ermine. Traditionally, the monarch appears on a golden throne, adorned in the Imperial State Crown set with diamonds and donning the Robe of State. Four months before her death last year, Charles took over for his 96-year-old mother and kept the crown on a cushion. The King’s Speech, not the Queen’s, will open Parliament for the first time since 1951. Throughout her 70-year reign, Elizabeth gave 67 speeches; she only skipped two because she was pregnant and asked Charles to read the speech on her behalf in May 2022. Charles III is the head of state of Britain, but he does not rule. It is a constitutional requirement for monarchs to heed the advice of the government when performing ceremonial functions, like presiding over Parliament and installing new prime ministers. The speech will provide hints about the Conservatives’ campaign strategy as this is most likely the final session of Parliament before the general election that will take place the following year. Preliminary information indicates a strong emphasis on law and order. The government wants to enact laws that “strengthen our society, help people feel safer in their own communities and give a sense of pride in the place they call home,” according to Prime Minister Rishi Sunak. Certain offences are probably going to carry harsher sentences, and Home Secretary Suella Braverman has proposed that when homeless people’s tents become a nuisance, the government should forbid them from doing so. Legislation is probably in the works to implement Sunak’s proposal to gradually raise the legal age of tobacco purchase in order to discourage smoking among the younger generation. A number of bills from the previous session will be carried over, including one that would strengthen renter protection and a controversial bill that would forbid public entities from enforcing “politically motivated boycotts of foreign countries”—a measure meant to put an end to boycotts of Israel. Along with this, the government intends to carry on the weakening of environmental regulations that Sunak began when he lifted the ban on North Sea oil and gas extraction in July. (With agency inputs)

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