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Poll shows Britons want Charles as next king

Updated: 2011-03-25 08:11

(China Daily)

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Poll shows Britons want Charles as next king
Britain's Prince Charles attends The Prince's Trust Celebrate Success Awards in London on Wednesday. [Photo/Agencies]

LONDON - More Britons want Prince Charles to become the United Kingdom's next monarch than his son William despite the huge interest in his upcoming wedding and previous suggestions he was the popular choice, a poll on Thursday said.

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Shortly after William's engagement to girlfriend Kate Middleton was announced last November, two polls showed a majority of Britons thought he should succeed Queen Elizabeth and not heir-to-the-throne Charles.

However, according to a YouGov survey for Prospect Magazine released on Thursday, that sentiment has now been reversed.

The poll of 2,409 people found the public would prefer Charles to be the next king by a 45 to 37 margin, a reversal of a similar survey in 2005 which backed William by a 41 to 37 margin.

Prospect suggested one possible reason for the reversal was that the public felt William and Middleton should be allowed to enjoy as normal-as-possible a life after their April 29 wedding.

British constitutional expert Norman St John-Stevas said there was no possibility that the throne could bypass Charles in any case.

"It would be a major breach of our constitution," he said.

"It would weaken the monarchy, it would make Prince William's task infinitely more difficult, it would be an act of gross injustice to Prince Charles who has done so much for the monarchy."

The poll also found that support for scrapping the monarchy had ebbed away. Shortly after the death of Charles' wife Diana in 1997, when there was widespread anger at the royal family, a quarter of Britons wanted to get rid of the monarchy.

The survey found that figure was down to 13 percent.

There was also strong support for an overhaul to a 300-year-old law which gives primacy to male heirs to the British throne.

The poll showed that 75 percent thought the eldest child of the monarch, whatever their sex, should succeed.

Reuters

 

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