Young people are much less convinced about supporting the monarchy, suggests a survey.
Among 18 to 24-year-olds, only 30% say the monarchy is "good for Britain", compared with 77% among the over-65s.
The survey of more than 2,000 adults in Britain comes as the first anniversary approaches of the death of Queen Elizabeth II.
The pollsters found that overall, 62% want to keep the monarchy.
But they report a "remarkable difference between generations", with younger people much less supportive on remaining a monarchy and more sceptical about the Royal Family representing good value for money.
For King Charles, as he approaches his first year on the throne, 59% of people thought he was "personally doing a good job".
The pollsters say there has been a broadly consistent picture of "overall positivity towards the monarchy", but there is also a sizeable and rising minority who are opposed.
Personally, in Norway, I'm fine with having a monarch, except for the unelected part and the hiring of their family. The monarch should be the only one being paid/having their expenses covered. Substitutes get paid for the time substituting.
Just hold a vote every now and then to prove that they have support. Polls are a poor substitute for elections.
Canadian here, what does the king/queen of England actually do? If it’s anything actually important it seems wild to me that it’s based on just being born or marrying in to a certain family. If it’s not important, than why the fuck waste the resources to support them in the manor you do? I don’t get it.
While they head up various charities and 'good work' as such, their value to the UK is really now only in tourism. People like travelling to the UK to see some of its history given that it is still 'current', so there are palaces to see, ceremonial stuff like changing of the guards. If we didn't have that, it would be one less reason to even travel to Britain I guess, and tourism is a large part of our GDP (over £130 billion). Reasons are, I imagine, diminishing...
When the Queen was alive, there was a very subtle soft power over Parliament because some Prime Ministers absolutely did not want to sit in front of her during their weekly audiences describing what a shambles they were making of the job and how they were failing people. I might be wrong, but I don't feel Charles has that same presence, so that has diminished too.