Queen Elizabeth’s Jubbly ‘draws protests & apathy’ in Commonwealth countries

On Friday, Buckingham Palace announced that Queen Elizabeth had traveled to Balmoral ahead of the Platinum Jubbly. It was extremely strange timing – she left Windsor either on Thursday or Friday, and she was originally supposed to stay until Wednesday (today), they claimed. But the Queen booked it back to Windsor on Tuesday, mid-day. Part of me wonders if she fought back against her aides’ plot to keep her away from Prince Harry and Meghan. Another part of me just thinks it’s completely bizarre that people thought it would be a good idea for the Queen to travel all the way to Balmoral just for four days, and that the trip was taken under the guise of it being “restful” or “restorative.” Meanwhile, the Platinum Jubbly celebrations are going down like a lead balloon all around the Commonwealth. Some highlights from Yahoo’s “In Commonwealth, queen’s jubilee draws protests and apathy.”

Colonial history: “When I think about the queen, I think about a sweet old lady,” said Jamaican academic Rosalea Hamilton, who campaigns for her country to become a republic. “It’s not about her. It’s about her family’s wealth, built on the backs of our ancestors. We’re grappling with the legacies of a past that has been very painful.”

The Windrush scandal: But Britain’s image of itself as a welcoming and diverse society has been battered by the revelation that hundreds, and maybe thousands, of people from the Caribbean who had lived legally in the U.K. for decades were denied housing, jobs or medical treatment — and in some cases deported — because they didn’t have the paperwork to prove their status. The British government has apologized and agreed to pay compensation, but the Windrush scandal has caused deep anger, both in the U.K. and in the Caribbean.

The Cambridges’ Flop Tour: A jubilee-year trip to Belize, Jamaica and the Bahamas in March by the queen’s grandson Prince William and his wife Kate, which was intended to strengthen ties, appears to have had the opposite effect. Images of the couple shaking hands with children through a chain-link fence and riding in an open-topped Land Rover in a military parade stirred echoes of colonialism for many. Cynthia Barrow-Giles, professor of political science at the University of the West Indies, said the British “seem to be very blind to the visceral sort of reactions” that royal visits elicit in the Caribbean.

The Queen has never acknowledged or apologized for many brutal inhumane things that happened during her reign: “From the start, her reign would be indelibly stained by the brutality of the empire she presided over and that accompanied its demise,” said Patrick Gathara, a Kenyan cartoonist, writer and commentator. “To this day, she has never publicly admitted, let alone apologized, for the oppression, torture, dehumanization and dispossession visited upon people in the colony of Kenya before and after she acceded to the throne.”

What will happen when King Charles is in charge: “Many of the more uncomfortable histories of the British Empire and the British Commonwealth are sort of waiting in the wings for as soon as Elizabeth II is gone,” royal historian Ed Owens said. “So it’s a difficult legacy that she is handing over to the next generation.”

[From Yahoo]

“Many of the more uncomfortable histories of the British Empire and the British Commonwealth are sort of waiting in the wings for as soon as Elizabeth II is gone… So it’s a difficult legacy that she is handing over to the next generation.” This is what I keep thinking about too, and why I’m convinced that all hell will break loose once QEII dies. The courtiers keep telling people that the Queen is spending her last months/years cleaning up various messes and family squabbles, and I think that’s true to some degree. She cares more about cleaning up Andrew’s mess than she does about ensuring that Charles keeps the Commonwealth together. Anyway, this is just a reminder – it’s not just British people who think this whole Jubbly thing is a tacky mess. The Commonwealth countries are watching and judging too.

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Backgrid and Instar.

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26 Responses to “Queen Elizabeth’s Jubbly ‘draws protests & apathy’ in Commonwealth countries”

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  1. Wiglet Watcher says:

    Let there be a protest in Wales…

    • Laura says:

      Let there be protests everywhere!! Abolish the monarchy!!

      • Wiglet Watcher says:

        Monarchy will lose steam if the white territories leave. Sadly, they might feel the others are expendable.
        Australia, Canada and Scotland would all be major blows that no one could claim otherwise on.

        And OMG of Scotland went balmoral would be an incredible burden.

      • BayTampaBay says:

        I think Nicola Ferguson Sturgeon, the First Minister of Scotland and leader of the Scottish National Party since 2014, stated that if Scotland left the UK, Scotland would keep QEII as Queen of Scotland. I may be wrong but I know I read this in some UK broadsheet newspaper somewhere or maybe it was The Guardian.

      • Jan90067 says:

        Wiglet, Balmoral is private, so the burden you’re speaking of would be on Chaz and the Egg, right? Isn’t this the property Lizzy got exempt from “green rules”? The energy costs alone for heating/lighting that place must be massive.

        I don’t think the Scottish government has (or would be able to use) an “Eminent Domain” kind of thing like we have here and take Balmoral as Scottish land, would they?

      • equality says:

        @Jan Probably what Wiglet means is that they would have to pay (oh, the horror) property taxes.

    • equality says:

      Yes.

  2. SarahCS says:

    I cannot wait for the next four days to be over, much as I cannot wait for the monarchy/commonwealth to implode once Liz is no longer around. It’s crumbling and this will be a think of beauty. Who knows how long the institution will carry on for but it’s already limping and the vultures are circling. These are the thoughts that keep me going as I’m surrounded by references to the jubbly as more and more people go hungry because they can no longer afford to eat.

    • equality says:

      Some aren’t waiting until she is no longer around. If she lasts years more, I’m sure more will lose patience and go ahead and dip out.

    • BayTampaBay says:

      It is not just the Commonwealth of Nations that is crumbling away from the Crown, the UK is crumbling too with respect to the Windsor Monarchy (Northern Ireland & Scotland anyone).

  3. Sunny in CA says:

    In Canada, I have seen nothing. No holiday! No celebration at Parliament! Nothing. It’s like it’s just another June week and weekend. The only thing we got was that whirlwind visit from Charles and it didn’t even come with an apology to the Indigenous nations.

    • DM2 says:

      Well, there’s lots planned, starting with the Beacon Lighting in Ottawa tonight, and stuff re: the Commonwealth Games.

      https://www.canada.ca/en/canadian-heritage/campaigns/platinum-jubilee.html

      Plus CBC is covering it ad nauseum starting today. There’ll be no getting away from National coverage.

    • JJS says:

      Am in Victoria, Canada, have barely heard anything. Count me in for apathy. I don’t get why people call her sweet, she’s clearly not. Charles I oddly could relate to in a nerdy environmental/architecture kind of way (not all the other stuff!) but I never saw the appeal in worshipping her. I think it’s kind of shitty for her to not take her share of responsibility for the residential schools, contribution to racism/ problematic colonialism overall…

      Edit to add: I also think it’s an age thing. I haven’t met anyone under 60 that cares about the queen, at least not in person. (Note I’m 39.)

  4. Tamsin says:

    Heh. Here in Australia, our new PM and government have way too much to do to waste time thinking about someone else’s monarch’s jubilee – as shown by the fact that said new PM has just appointed an Assistant Minister for the Republic to his Cabinet. As the old ads used to say, It won’t happen overnight, but it will happen…

  5. Nadal 22 says:

    We live in America. My husband is welsh, I’m chinese american and we are going to the a garden party celebrating the jubilee at the Brit consulate later. When I went to get a blow out – my hairdresser goes ‘oh I’ll do your hair like Meghan markle!’

  6. Rice says:

    This Jubbly has made barely a blip here in Trinidad & Tobago. But then again, we’ve been a republic since 1976.

  7. Cerys says:

    The vast majority of Brits are treating the Jubby with apathy too despite the media trying to portray otherwise. The diehard Royalists and the tourists in London will be out in force but most normal people will be avoiding Jubby events. Sadly, most Brits are also too apathetic to protest about it.

    • Talia says:

      I agree. I’m going to a party on the Sunday but it’s at an old people’s home (family invitation) and most of the people there probably remember the coronation. Most younger people are just looking forward to the 4 day weekend.

  8. J. Ferber says:

    Yes, let the whole apparatus fall into ruins upon the death of QE2.

  9. Cinders says:

    It’s remarkably low key even here in the UK. People are pleased we got an extra public holiday, and there are a few street parties being organised, which are just glorified picnics for the kids really, but there really doesn’t seem to be much interest in the Jubilee itself, as a Royal event. (The BBC has a lot of TV coverage lined up, but then they always go overboard on the Royal stuff.) The mood is a world away from the last Jubilee 10 years ago.

  10. Lauren says:

    That’s so exciting, didn’t realise a Minister had been appointed! Let’s hope an Aus republic finally gets some momentum 🤞

  11. Bisynaptic says:

    I just developed the “theory” that William staged his colonialist flop tour just to sabotage his dad’s prospects as the next head of the Commonwealth.