logo
Kate will meet Macron with Wills & King next week – just days after opening up about her ‘rollercoaster' cancer recovery

Kate will meet Macron with Wills & King next week – just days after opening up about her ‘rollercoaster' cancer recovery

Scottish Sun3 days ago
Click to share on X/Twitter (Opens in new window)
Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)
KATE will join William and the King and Queen at Windsor for the French State Visit next week - just days after opening up about her "rollercoaster" cancer recovery.
The Princess of Wales, 43, described the ongoing struggle of "cracking on" and putting on a "brave face" while speaking to cancer patients this week after she pulled out of Royal Ascot.
Sign up for Scottish Sun
newsletter
Sign up
6
The Princess of Wales during a visit to the RHS's Wellbeing Garden at Colchester Hospital in Essex
Credit: PA
6
The Princess of Wales described the ongoing struggle of "cracking on" and putting on a "brave face" while speaking to cancer patients this week
Credit: PA
6
France's President Emmanuel Macron next to Prime Minister Keir Starmer. The Macrons are expected to have lunch with the Starmers during the visit
Credit: Reuters
But she will return to ceremonial royal duties as French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte will receive the pomp and ceremony of a carriage ride and State Banquet at Windsor Castle on Tuesday, it has been confirmed.
It is the first State Visit to be held at Windsor since 2014 when Irish President Michael D Higgins was given the honour.
Buckingham Palace is out of action due to ongoing £369million renovation.
Donald Trump's expected State Visit in September is also expected to be at Windsor Castle.
Palace officials have confirmed William and Kate will greet the Macrons at RAF Northolt on Tuesday morning on behalf of the King and travel with them to Windsor.
Charles and Camilla will formally greet their guests on a Royal Dais constructed on Datchet Road in Windsor town centre, with the castle in the backdrop as gun salutes sound in nearby Home Park.
The King, the Queen, the Waleses and Macrons will then take a carriage procession through the town and along part of the Long Walk into the Castle.
A ceremonial welcome will be held in the castle's quadrangle with Camilla, William, Kate and Mrs Macron watching as the King and President Macron inspect the Guard of Honour.
After lunch in the State Dining Room they will all view a special exhibition of items relating to France from the Royal Collection in the Green Drawing Room.
The Macrons will also travel to London on Tuesday afternoon to see the Grave of the Unknown Warrior at Westminster Abbey.
At the Houses of Parliament the French leader will address parliamentarians in the Royal Gallery, and meet opposition leaders at Lancaster House.
The King and president will both deliver speeches at the banquet on Tuesday evening.
Kensington Palace has yet to confirm whether or not the princess will attend the banquet in Windsor Castle's St George's Hall.
In a personal touch, the King and Queen will, on Wednesday, take the Macrons to see Fabuleu de Maucour, a 10-year-old grey gelding which Mr Macron gifted to known horse-lover the late Queen Elizabeth II in 2022 in celebration of her Platinum Jubilee.
Fabuleu de Maucour belonged to the largely ceremonial French Republican Guard and was trained to carry the standard-bearer.
They will also view an elegant Charabanc carriage from the Royal Mews, which was a present to Queen Victoria from King Louis-Philippe of France in 1844.
And the Macrons will privately pay their respects at the late Queen's tomb in St George's Chapel by laying flowers in tribute.
Charles, Ranger of Windsor Great Park, will also invite the president to tour the Windsor Castle Gardens, including areas of nature restoration and biodiversity and the wider Great Park.
Wednesday will see the president and Mrs Macron join Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer and Lady Starmer for lunch at Downing Street, ahead of a UK-France summit at Number 10 on Thursday.
The King and Queen paid a state visit to France in September 2023 and enjoy a warm rapport with French leader and his wife, who will stay in the castle during their trip.
It is largely seen as a template for Trump's visit in the autumn.
The last state visit to the UK from France was in March 2008 when the now-disgraced president Nicolas Sarkozy, since convicted of corruption and influence peddling, and his wife Carla Bruni, were the guests of Queen Elizabeth II at Windsor.
6
The Princess of Wales planting a rose during a visit to the RHS's Wellbeing Garden at Colchester Hospital in Essex
Credit: PA
6
The Princess of Wales during a visit to the RHS's Wellbeing Garden
Credit: PA
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Society ‘struggling' to respond to link between smartphones and youth extremism
Society ‘struggling' to respond to link between smartphones and youth extremism

South Wales Guardian

timean hour ago

  • South Wales Guardian

Society ‘struggling' to respond to link between smartphones and youth extremism

In an interview as the 20th anniversary of the July 7 attacks is marked, Jonathan Hall KC said current methods used by extremists to influence potential recruits are 'a million miles' from the tactics used in the run up to 2005. Suicide bombers Mohammed Sidique Khan, 30, Shehzad Tanweer, 22, Hasib Hussain, 18, and Jermaine Lindsay, 19, set off bombs on three Tube trains and a bus, killing 52 people in the single worst terrorist atrocity on British soil. Ringleader and recruiter Khan appeared to be a pillar of the community, steering local youths away from crime and drugs by organising outdoor activities and helping to set up a gym in a mosque basement, but was in reality a fanatic. Mr Hall told the PA news agency the wide availability of smartphones has transformed radicalisation since then. 'The principal distinction from the era of 7/7 is the smartphone era,' Mr Hall said. 'That has changed the landscape. It has led to a different model of radicalisation. 'With 7/7 the indications were that Mohammad Sidique Khan was grooming people, there was a youth club, they went and did rafting together. 'Those sorts of outdoorsy, in person, group grooming activities, those feel a million miles away from the online world of radicalisation. 'I'm not aware of any sane person who seeks to argue the current wave of very young people becoming involved in terrorism, or extreme violence where it's not ideological, that that's not related to the internet and to the ready availability of smartphones. 'There's a very live debate about the ethics, the legality and the practicalities of which response is best. 'But we are absolutely grasping at straws and struggling, at the moment, as a society to work out what the correct response is. 'No one in their right minds would allow their children to allow a stranger into their bedroom, but that's what we've done with phones.' The attacks exposed the deadly threat from homegrown terrorists with 'appalling clarity', Mr Hall said. 'What 7/7 did, is it revealed with appalling clarity that our fellow citizens are willing to kill us. 'That very unsettling insight is as true today as it was back then, except you now have to bring in British citizens who have been inspired by extreme right-wing ideology to join the predominant Islamist threat. 'But that was the real kicker from 7/7. I think it really brought home this idea of the homegrown threat.' Commander Dominic Murphy said July 7 was 'a seminal moment' for counter-terrorism policing, leading to a series of changes that continued after the five terror attacks in the UK in 2017. He said that while Islamist groups are still the main threat to the UK, right wing terrorism is a growing problem, and there is concern that younger people are being drawn into extremism. In 2024, 39 of the 248 people arrested for terrorism offences were aged 17 and under, while children aged 11 to 15 made up the largest proportion of those referred to anti-extremism scheme Prevent (2,729 out of 6,884). 'Islamist remains our main threat. We do see a growing right-wing terrorist problem,' Mr Murphy said. 'We're increasingly seeing younger people involved in that right-wing threat as well, which is deeply concerning for us. 'But of course, we also see people that don't have a clear or fixed ideology. 'We can't say clearly that they're an Islamist terrorist, we can't say clearly that they ascribe to a right-wing ideology. 'Nonetheless, they're consuming large amounts of violent media online, and they might have a mixed or unclear ideology – that means, of course, we still need to be concerned about the threat to the public. 'It's diversified a lot even since 2017 and I think the online environment and the world environment adds a whole new layer of challenge to the threat that we face.'

Keir Starmer told to 'stop cosying up' to Donald Trump
Keir Starmer told to 'stop cosying up' to Donald Trump

The National

time2 hours ago

  • The National

Keir Starmer told to 'stop cosying up' to Donald Trump

It comes after the Prime Minister said last week that he understood what the president cares about and that they had bonded over shared family values. Speaking on BBC Radio 4's Political Thinking programme on Friday, Starmer said: "For both of us, we really care about family and there's a point of connection there. "I think I do understand what anchors the president, what he really cares about." Keir Starmer and Donald Trump (Image: PA) Starmer has been criticised by the Scottish Greens, who accused him of "glamorising" his relationship with Trump. The party pointed towards Donald Trump's hush money conviction in 2023, as well as the US president's policies on healthcare and immigration, as they urged the Prime Minister to instead stand for "the values of democracy and human rights". READ MORE: SNP left wing push back against internal 'inertia' over indy strategy Scottish Greens MSP Maggie Chapman said that under Donald Trump, the US "is in turmoil". She said: 'His administration is sending innocent people to be tortured in foreign countries, he's just passed a bill that will strip 17 million Americans of their healthcare, he's begun an unprecedented transfer of wealth from the poor to his billionaire supporters, and he has openly called for the ethnic cleansing of Gaza. Maggie Chapman (Image: Christian Gamauf) 'For a UK Prime Minister to sit there and talk about his shared values with this President should set off alarm bells in every institution and every voter in this country. "Cosying up to a racist, misogynistic, climate-wrecking authoritarian like Donald Trump is the last thing we should be doing." Chapman said that "if we don't have our values, we have nothing", as she added: 'While values may be a flexible concept to Keir Starmer – if you don't like his values he, opportunistically, has others – it must not be for our country." The Scottish Greens MSP said Downing Street is "copying Trump's homework" by attempting to push through cuts to disability benefits to boost "spending on war and defence". READ MORE: Details emerge of Scottish arm of new Corbyn project 'Rather than working to overcome 14 years of Tory austerity and rebuild the country, Starmer is doubling down on the same disastrous policies that got us into the mess we're in," she added. Chapman went on to say that Labour were continuing to "echo the White House by refusing to end their active participation in the ongoing genocide of Palestinians in Gaza". She continued: "We see the death-toll mounting daily. We watch as innocent civilians are shot or blown up while waiting for food inside barbed wire enclosures. "Keir Starmer can't even bring himself to call out these atrocities, never mind end the UK's training and arming of those perpetrating them." Chapman asked: 'Are these the family values he speaks of so fondly? Is this really the path we want to follow? "Starmer must end this pathetic grovelling to the US President and begin standing up for real values – democracy, human rights, and a fair economy that improves living standards for everyone.'

The lesson that changed my life
The lesson that changed my life

Spectator

time2 hours ago

  • Spectator

The lesson that changed my life

Ávila, Spain At school I wasn't much good at anything – until, that is, I had the good fortune to land in Mr Hodges's French set. It wasn't just the ten words of vocabulary and the irregular verb we learnt every day, it was the whole structured Hodges approach which gave me confidence, showing how the apparently unmanageable job of learning a language could be broken down into small, achievable tasks. Since Mr H also taught Spanish O-level, when the time came I opted for that rather than German. The scenes of Spanish life in the textbook fascinated me; they were only black and white line drawings but they promised something romantic that I knew I'd never find in cold, wet 1970s Birmingham. I pored over those pictures. A-level Spanish, including literature, history and culture, deepened the attraction. Eager to put my book learning to the test, I started my Easter 1974 study trip to Seville by ordering a café con leche in the first bar I saw. Previously I'd only known instant coffee; after two cups of the real stuff I was fully on board with Hemingway's description of Spain as 'unspoilt… and… unbelievably wonderful'. Soon the Moorish palaces, the storks wheeling in the sky, the orange trees, fountains and palms in the patios, the street cafés and the voluptuously beautiful women had sealed the deal. In Somerset Maugham's story 'The Happy Man' a young doctor asks the author if he should throw up his job in Camberwell and go to live in Spain. The author replies: 'Your whole future is concerned: you must decide for yourself. But this I can tell you: if you don't want money but are content to earn just enough to keep body and soul together, then go. For you will lead a wonderful life.' So that's what he does. Years later the doctor, now married to a beautiful Spanish woman, declares: 'I wouldn't exchange the life I've had with that of any king in the world.' And that's very much my story too. After Spanish at university I also tried the respectable job in London but found the pull of Spain irresistible. I've now been living in Ávila, central Spain, married to a beautiful Spanish woman for over 40 years. I found I could earn enough teaching at a second-rate – OK, third-rate – university to pay the bills. (Incidentally, for the academically competent but professionally unambitious, 'lecturer at a mediocre university' is a career path well worth considering.) Spain's poor-quality universities (the best ranks 149th in the world, the rest far lower) are a small part of a much bigger problem: public life. Spain has fallen sharply both in the World Bank's governance indicators and in Transparency International's Corruption Perceptions Index. And the bureaucracy, 'conceived by Gogol and scripted by Kafka', explains why Spain was recently ranked 114th out of 141 countries for burden of government regulation. You can take the boy out of England but you can't take England out of the boy Meanwhile the politicians themselves are hilariously bad. With the brief exception of the transition from dictatorship to democracy, Spain hasn't had a decent government for well over 200 years. It's not just their headline-grabbing corruption and chicanery, their laziness, incompetence, the infantile insults they hurl at their opponents and the childish lies they tell – Spanish politicians' everyday pronouncements are also a constant source of entertainment. Recently, for example, the deputy prime minister solemnly informed a startled nation that the principle of presumption of innocence is a disgrace. When somebody told her that it's, you know, a cornerstone of democratic freedom, she tried to pretend that she'd never suggested otherwise. Spaniards have only themselves to blame since they take little interest in the doings of their politicians (until, that is, the nation is without electricity for hours on end or 228 people die avoidable deaths in a flash flood). But all the energy that they aren't expending on civic engagement is being channelled into celebrating life with their friends, neighbours and family. Supported by the unconditional love of their families, Spaniards are well-adjusted, altruistic and happy in their own skins. As the novelist Stanley Weyman observed over a century ago: 'The Spaniard is a gentleman and gentleman-like regards all men as his equals… A man in rags will address a duke with self-respect as well as with respect. He does not know what it is to be awkward in any presence, but will offer a cigarette to a marquis or a millionaire, and accept one in return with equal nonchalance and affability. It is a fine feature.' Similarly Orwell celebrated Spaniards' 'straightforwardness and generosity… [their] real largeness of spirit, which I have met with again and again in the most unpromising circumstances.' That's certainly been my experience. When people ask me why I don't apply for Spanish nationality, I say 'Because I'm not Spanish, I'm English'. And when they ask if I miss England, the answer is 'no'. I go back often enough to see family and friends (and the Test matches) but more importantly I carry a lot of England inside me: you can take the boy out of England but you can't take England out of the boy. Formative years in England followed by adult life in Spain is a combination that's worked fine for me. Accepting his Prince of Asturias award in 2011, Leonard Cohen spoke of his great debt to Spain; a voice had been telling him, he said, 'you are an old man and you have not said thank you.' He was right: there comes a time when you should express your gratitude. So muchas gracias, Spain – and muchas gracias, Mr Hodges.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store