No 10 denies dragging king into politics after visit to Cornwall with Starmer

Mon, 10 Feb 2025, 18:24
Full Content
Full article content available

Downing Street has insisted that King Charles was not at risk of being dragged into politics after the monarch took Keir Starmer and his deputy on a tour of a housing project in Cornwall.

In a rare joint engagement between the monarch and political leaders, the trio visited Nansledan, a 540-acre extension to the seaside town of Newquay, as a result of their shared interest in modern housing developments.

The Guardian understands the unusual visit follows discussions about housing, including when Labour was in opposition, between Charles and Starmer, as well as Angela Rayner, in which the project was mentioned.

The prime minister is said to have expressed an interest in seeing the development in person, and the king offered to show him and Rayner, who is also housing secretary, around the kind of community he believes should be created.

Government sources played down the timing of the event, which comes ahead of a major government housing announcement this week. “We’ve actually gone to great efforts not to draw any link with the royal visit,” one said. “The king has long been passionate about this issue.”

Asked if making the visit days before the announcement risked the king being dragged into politics, Starmer’s official spokesperson replied: “No. Obviously, this project is entirely run by the palace and the Duchy [of Cornwall], but the government has spoken repeatedly on its ambitions on housebuilding.”

Palace sources said the king and prime minister had a shared interest in housing, which they had been discussing since Starmer was in opposition. They said the visit was a matter of “show not tell” and the timing was solely down to diaries, rather than linked to any official announcement.

A government source said the king wanted to “show off, in the nicest possible way”, the Cornish development.

Another said it was “absolutely critical” that the public saw that new homes came with supporting infrastructure and public services, as in Nansledan, that would also help develop a sense of community.

The prime minister has set up a taskforce to create the next generation of new towns as part of his drive to have 1.5m new homes built before the next election.

The visit is believed to be the first time in recent history that a monarch has been accompanied by senior politicians on a joint engagement, focusing on a royal-inspired project. In 1998, he took John Prescott, then the deputy prime minister,

on a tour of his Poundbury development

in Dorset.

AI Model Selection

Avg. Response: 10.0s

Llama3.2:1b

Meta
Default
Size: 1B
Success Rate: 100.0%

Llama-3.2-1B-Instruct-GGUF

Meta
Size: 1B
Success Rate: 100.0%
All models run locally on our servers. Response times may vary based on server load.