ON THE
WSWS
Donate
to
the WSWS!
News Feed
Contact
the
WSWS
Editorial
Board
New
Today
News
& Analysis
Workers
Struggles
Arts
Review
History
Science
Polemics
Philosophy
Correspondence
Archive
About
WSWS
About
the ICFI
Help
Books
Online
OTHER
LANGUAGES
German
French
Italian
Russian
Polish
Czech
Serbo-Croatian
Spanish
Portuguese
Turkish
Sinhala-
Tamil
Indonesian
LEAFLETS
Download
in
PDF format
|
|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Britain
The Queen Mothers funeral and the campaign to save the
British monarchy
By Julie Hyland
11 April 2002
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email the
author
It has been said that no country does pomp and ceremony quite
like Britain, and all the stops were certainly pulled out for
the Queen Mothers funeral on April 9.
From the time of her death, aged 101 years, on March 30 to
the final ceremony, no expense or effort was spared. Tens of thousands
lined Londons streets for the funeral, which was attended
by 35 members of the British royal family and the monarchs of
Spain, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, Belgium, the Netherlands, Greece
and Romania. The ranks of assembled dignitarieswhich included
UN Secretary Kofi Annan and US First Lady Laura Bushlistened
in silence as the Queen Mothers list of official titles
was read outLady of the Most Noble Order of the Garter,
Lady of the Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the Thistle,
Lady of the Imperial Order of the Crown of India, etc. It hardly
mattered that much of this made little sense to the majority of
those watching. Above all, the titles are meant to signify imperial
tradition and continuity, hence Elizabeth Bowes-Lyons final
accoladeMother of Her Most Excellent Majesty Elizabeth The
Second, by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom of Great Britain
and Northern Ireland and of her other Realms and Territories,
Queen, Head of the Commonwealth, Defender of the Faith, Sovereign
of the Most Noble Order of the Garter.
The funeral was the culmination of a carefully choreographed
10-day programme, in which the nation was force fed a constant
diet of royal grandeur and militarismcanons, carriages,
archers, trumpeters, bagpipes, royal beefeaters and all manner
of archaic, ridiculous and generally concocted traditions. On
at least two occasions, the Queen Mothers coffin had been
drawn through the streets of London draped in the royal standard
with the diamond-studded royal crown perched on top. In a mawkish
20-minute ceremony the evening before the funeral, the Queen Mothers
four grandsons stood solemnly at either corner of the catafalque
as it lay in state at Westminster Hall while a queue of tourists
and royal watchers filed past to gawp.
There was something frankly disgusting about the wealth and
splendour on display. Having proclaimed the end of the welfare
state some two decades ago, the British ruling class has created
a country characterised by vast social inequalities. The ceremony
took place in the capital city of the worlds fourth richest
economy, where billions are traded every day. But in contrast
the British working class is amongst the poorest in Western Europedespite
working the longest hours. More than one-third of all children
are born into poverty. Many will leave school with little or no
meaningful qualifications, where they will swell the ranks of
the more than six million adults already classified as functionally
illiterate. How many teachers, nurses, or other vital services
could have been brought with the money frittered away in this
one royal event?
Ending the so-called something for nothing society
has not applied to the ruling elite, however. The Labour governments
pledge of radical constitutional reform has been a
largely cosmetic exercise that has left hereditary privilege intact.
Not for nothing did the Mirror feel bold enough to editorialise
on the Queen Mother: Yes, she was rich and privileged. Yes,
she had palaces and servants. Yes, she had a great life at our
expense. But she was more than that.
The extended and lavish nature of the funeral-cum-celebration
was not dictated by any public demand. Even amongst committed
royalists, the Queen Mothers death could hardly be considered
tragic. Not only had this extremely wealthy woman
lived to almost 102 years old, the last years of her life had
been relatively free from major illness or disease. Indeed, the
death certificate recorded that she had died of extreme
old age. What was mounted was more akin to a sustained marketing
and public relations campaign on behalf of the institution of
the monarchy. Globalisation and the processes associated with
itespecially those of sharp social differentiationhave
made it increasingly difficult for the powers that be to justify
the survival of this feudal relic into the 21st century. Indeed,
at the time of Princess Dianas death in August 1997, the
monarchy had begun to feel its time might really be up.
With the end of the century approaching, the Princesss
death had been used by sections of the bourgeoisie to press for
what they insisted was a more meritocratic set up. Tony Blair
and his New Labour government was chosen as the political representative
of a fabulously wealthy layer which had made its money during
the speculative boom of the 1980s, and which saw his calls for
modernisation as a vehicle through which the aristocratic
old guard of the British establishment could be pushed aside and
their own political muscle made commensurate with their new-found
economic clout. They demanded at least the reform and scaling
down of the monarchy, if not the move to a republic. This met
up with the powerful but politically undefined feelings of social
discontent amongst broader layers of the population, which felt
little sympathy any more for the House of Windsor.
Amidst talk that the royal family would be booed at Dianas
funeral, there was such concern that a wave of republicanism might
sweep the nation, out of all control, that the Queen Mother had
reportedly queried of the crowds on the day of Dianas funeral,
What would they do if I keeled over now? It was a
visibly shaken Queen Elizabeth that appeared on television to
tell of her upset on the death of her estranged daughter-in-law.
The Blair government and its supporters were afraid that anything
that undermined the monarchy as the ultimate symbol of inherited
privilege might in the end call into question the entire system
of class privilege. The claim that Britain was supposedly a meritocracy
because Rupert Murdoch was a self-made man could hardly compensate
for the loss of such a powerful symbol of traditional social structures
based on deference to the British state and its supposedly natural
rulers.
And so, ruling circles, their government and the mediahaving
shown who was the real power in the landset out to restore
the monarchys public standing. This has proved to be a difficult
task. This year is the occasion of the Queens Golden Jubilee,
but there were fears that the lack of public support for the event
could produce a major humiliation with serious political repercussions.
In contrast to the thousands of street parties held during the
Silver Jubilee in 1977, local authorities were reporting bookings
of just five or ten. Even when the booking deadline was extended,
the response remained desultory. In the end, the Queen announced
that she would throw her own party in the grounds of the palace
for which people could win ticketsa list of popular bands
and musicians hopefully ensuring a respectable turnout.
The funeral of Princess Margaret, the Queens sister,
last month was also a non-event. No one quite knew how to summon
up public sympathy for a pampered and spoilt woman, renowned only
for her drinking and partying, and so it was all played low-key.
In the days following the Queen Mothers death, the anticipated
crowds did not turn out. Reporters rushed out to the London parks
to find the crowds in mourning, usually only turning up one man
and his dog. Newspapers showed rows of queue barriers, set up
for people to pay their last respects, virtually empty. The crowds
at Buckingham Palace were reportedly thin, consisting chiefly
of tourists.... Books of condolence were opened, but the queues
to sign them were brisk to non-existent. The BBC was attacked
for showing disrespectits newscaster having worn a purple,
rather than a black tie when announcing the death. Its real crime
was its inability to pretend that there was anything less than
mild interest in the royal death.
Media, politicians and royal family alike mounted a concerted
campaign to shift the public response. The Windsors went out of
their way to prove that they had learned their lessons from Dianas
death, and were prepared to modernisePrincess
Anne in trousers for the funeral procession, flowers from the
Queen to her mother, signed simply Lilibet, Prince
Charles perpetually, and publicly, on the verge of tears, in contrast
to his stony face during the period of official mourning for the
wife he detested, Diana.
The celebration of a grand old ladys life
became a vehicle for celebrating Great Britain, with an
emphasis on tradition and continuity. What better way to mark
the advent of the new imperialism recently proclaimed
by the Blair government and already being marked out in the Middle
East and Africa, than with a display of the pomp and ceremony
of the old empire. One can only imagine Blairs delight on
returning from his tête-à-tête with US President
Bush, and their discussions on bombing Iraq, to such a display
of imperial grandeur and naked militarism on the streets of London.
Monarchists expressed their hope that the Queen Mothers
death has helped reinvigorate the monarchy just as in life she
had saved the royal family during its darkest houran
oblique reference to 1936 when King Edward VIII was forced to
abdicate, not because of his love for an American divorcee but
due to his very public pro-Nazi sympathies. Her husband, Albert,
the Duke of York, was crowned as George VI on May 12, 1937, to
lend an illusion of stability and continuity by making a direct
association with the reign of his father, George V. Having preserved
the monarchy once, her death might just save it again, they opined.
A little nip and tuck here, and the status quo could be preservedensuring
both stability and change.
Britains media has pronounced itself satisfied with their
campaign in this regard. The Mirror editorialised, There
has never been such respect and affection for the Royal Family.
What the Monarchy gives Britain is stability, an increasingly
important quality in an era of uncertainty. Yesterday we looked
at Tony Blair and the other politicians and did not know what
the future will bring for them. Yet when we looked at that small
row of seats beside the coffin, we say the future of the Monarchy
stretching ahead for close on a century. Elizabeth, Charles and
William. Our Queen and our next two Kings.
To pin so much on such a discredited institutionparticularly
on such deeply flawed personalities as Charles and Williamis
a telling indication of political disorientation, even desperation.
The media and the establishment circles it serves will find to
its cost that it is one thing to stage-manage a funeral and quite
another to build a viable base of social and political support
for an outmoded system of rule. In the final analysis, all the
pomp and ceremony, all the talk about saving the monarchy
only underscores that it is precisely social and political support
that is lacking.
See Also:
The "Diana"
phenomenon re-examined
[29 August 1998]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |