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Queen Elizabeth II

Rumours swirl that The Queen will make Charles Prince Regent when she turns 95 – here is how it could happen

Queen Elizabeth II

It has been reported that The Queen has implied she would consider making her son, Prince Charles, Prince Regent once she reaches the age of 95.

Speaking to The Royal Beat, available on TrueRoyalty, royal expert Robert Jobson said: “I still firmly believe when The Queen becomes 95, that she will step down.”

Newsweek Royal Reporter Jack Royston agreed, saying: “I think she won’t want to, but realistically she will get to a point where she has handed over everything to Charles and then how do you look your son in the eye and tell him he is not going to be King?”

So, could this happen? Is it possible for The Queen to hand over her delegation of duties without actually abdicating?

The short answer is yes. Such a situation would occur where The Queen is unable to fulfil her duties and responsibilities for whatever reason.

The last time Britain had a Regent was in the early 1800s, when King George III was unable to carry out his duties due to mental illness. His son, the future George IV, took over the King’s responsibility under the Regency Act.

The Regency Act 1937 made way for a regent to step in should a monarch become incapacitated. Three of more people such as the monarch’s spouse, the Speaker of the House of Commons, the Lord Chancellor, the Lord Chief Justice and the Master of the Rolls must put in writing that the Regent will perform the duties of the monarch until a time which they are fit.

The act does also say that this is only to last until the monarch is able to resume their duties, so should The Queen make Charles Prince Regent an addendum would have to be made for this new circumstance.

Phil Dampier, who has been writing about The Royal Family for 30 years, reaffirms that The Queen will only consider a regency if she became seriously ill.

He says: “The Queen will certainly never abdicate. At the moment she is in excellent health and so she won’t be giving this serious thought right now. In fact, I know she has told friends that she wants to live to 100 like her mother. 

“The only reason a regency would ever be contemplated if is she became seriously ill, either mentally or physically. But I don’t believe she would consider an artificial cut off time such as reaching 95. She will consider the situation as each year passes.”

Buckingham Palace has always declined to comment on these reports, although a spokeswoman has pointed in the direction of the words Her Majesty said on the occasion of her 21st birthday, as well as her address to Parliament in 2012.

On her 21st birthday in 1947, The Queen said: “I declare before you all that my whole life whether it be long or short shall be devoted to your service and the service of our great imperial family to which we all belong.”

Her speech to Parliament during the Diamond Jubilee further reaffirmed this message, saying: “I have been privileged to witness some of that history and, with the support of my family, rededicate myself to the service of our great country and its people now and in the years to come.”