From greeting, at the age of four, next to his mother, to being the protagonist on the balcony of Buckingham. 70 years later not only has the monarchy changed in the United Kingdom, but rather that Carlos III now faces some implantable challenges in 1953.
Above all because, although in a symbolic way, he has always wanted to have an active public role and has even been willing to investigate the links of the British crown with the historic slave trade.
But none of that has made him enjoy great charisma. With inflation at 10%, more than half of the population has been against publicly financing the 100 million pounds that his coronation has cost, according to data from a survey carried out by YouGov.
AND it will also be difficult to win over the young, of which only 36% are in favor of the monarchy. This is in the United Kingdom, because disaffection is even greater in countries like Canada or Australia, where he is also head of state. Many of these countries ruled out changing their form of State while Elizabeth II was on the throne, but already in the last year of her reign, many analysts pointed out that it was inevitable that, after her death, most of them would choose to abandon the monarchy.
Carlos III is already king of a country mired in a political and social drift in which anger with the institutions, and more so after Brexit whose results are not liked by more than 60% of the population, can no longer be stopped.
Source: Lasexta

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