The Queen will not give up the throne for Prince Charles – and that's why | Royal | New



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Nick Bullen, an award-winning filmmaker, spent years making documentaries about the British monarchy. The filmmaker believes that the queen will never "retire" – and not only because of her unwavering commitment to her duty. Bullen believes that the Queen's reluctance to abdicate is due to renewed interest in the royal family, thanks to younger members such as Meghan Markle and Prince Harry.

The arrival of a new generation of members of the royal family, such as Prince George, Prince Louis and Princess Charlotte, has also proved its worth.

Sending to the Yahoo News series The Royal True Royalty TV Box, Mr Bullen said: "I think the Queen sees what these boys and their women bring. I also wonder if she does not even give a gift to great-grandchildren.

"Princess Charlotte, already 3 years old, knows how to work with a crowd.

READ MORE: Royal news: The royal family fears that Prince Charles can not SHAME to royalty like Edward VIII

"Maybe now, thanks to her grandchildren, she can find a way to stay on the crest of this wave."

On her 21st birthday, the Queen, then Princess Elizabeth, held a heartwarming vow to the world during a live broadcast of Cape Town, during the South African tour of the royal family in 1947.

One of her most famous phrases said: "All my life, whether long or short, will be dedicated to your service and to the service of our great imperial family", the Queen taking her vow almost 70 years later.

Mr. Bullen also hinted that Charles, Prince of Wales – though ready to become king at age 70 – could not ascend the throne in the next ten years, which means that he will become king at age 80 or more.

Mr. Bullen said, "His mother lived up to 101 years old. The queen is here for the long term. She could live for at least another 10 years.

"She saw everything, she did everything, she is the mother and the woman who works and therefore, and I do not think she'll go anywhere, so soon."

Prince Charles was considered to be preparing for King's role throughout life after being formally invested in the role of Prince of Wales in 1969 during a public ceremony.

Charles is the oldest Prince of Wales in history and the oldest heir to power.

But the Daily Mail reports that the queen has informed her close entourage that, if she is still in power at age 95, she will ask for the application of the law on the regency.

The law is a bill that would give Charles the full power to rule even if he is still alive.

In 2017, Charles was named successor to the Queen at the head of the Commonwealth. and she is yielding more and more patronage and royal duties to younger members of the family in recent years.

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