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Sweden

King Carl of Sweden strips five grandchildren of royal status

Source: News Corp Australia Network:
October 8, 2019 at 10:08
The King of Sweden (second row, centre) has stripped five of his grandchildren of their royal status. Picture: Erika Gerdemark/Royal Court of SwedenSource:Supplied
The King of Sweden (second row, centre) has stripped five of his grandchildren of their royal status. Picture: Erika Gerdemark/Royal Court of SwedenSource:Supplied
The King of Sweden has stripped five of his grandkids of their royal status — meaning they’ll no longer get a cent of the taxpayers’ money.

The King of Sweden has stripped five of his grandchildren of their royal status amid mounting pressure to cut back the monarchy’s annual bills.

The children, aged between one and five, are the offspring of two of King Carl XVI Gustaf’s younger children — Prince Carl and his wife Sofia, and US-based Princess Madeleine and her husband Christopher O’Neill.

Prince Carl Philip and Princess Sofia with their two children, Alexander and Gabriel. Picture: Anna-Lena Ahlstram/Royal Court of Sweden
Prince Carl Philip and Princess Sofia with their two children, Alexander and Gabriel. Picture: Anna-Lena Ahlstram/Royal Court of SwedenSource:Supplied

 

 
Princess Madeleine and her husband, Christopher, with their three children, Leonore, Nicolas and Adrienne. Picture: Anna-Lena Ahlstram/Royal Court of Sweden
Princess Madeleine and her husband, Christopher, with their three children, Leonore, Nicolas and Adrienne. Picture: Anna-Lena Ahlstram/Royal Court of SwedenSource:Supplied

 

While the five children will remain members of the royal family, they’ll lose the titles of His and Her Royal Highness and, significantly, will not have access to taxpayer funds.
 

The King with his heirs, Crown Princess Victoria and her daughter, Princess Estelle. Picture: Sandra Birgersdotter Ek/Royal Court of Sweden
The King with his heirs, Crown Princess Victoria and her daughter, Princess Estelle. Picture: Sandra Birgersdotter Ek/Royal Court of SwedenSource:Supplied

 

Princess Madeleine explained that the change “has been planned for a long time” and it would give her three children a “greater opportunity to shape their own lives”.

Meanwhile, Carl and Sofia were also happy with the decision, writing in a joint statement: “We see this as positive as Alexander and Gabriel will have freer choices in life.”

The cost of the monarchy on taxpayers has been under scrutiny in recent years, with the bill currently topping $21 million annually.

According to the Swedish royal court’s top official, Fredrik Wersall, the royal family understood and had accepted the need for change.

“We have a large royal family. If you include the next generation, there are currently 10 people in the line of succession,” he told Swedish media.

The Swedish royal family pose for Gabriel’s christening portrait in 2017. Picture: Erika Gerdemark/Royal Court of Sweden
The Swedish royal family pose for Gabriel’s christening portrait in 2017. Picture: Erika Gerdemark/Royal Court of SwedenSource:Supplied

 

It’s a similar format in the British royal family, where the decision to bestow titles upon close relatives of the Queen’s has often come down to the parents’ choice.

Zara and Peter Phillips missed out on royal titles after their parents, Princess Anne and Mark Phillips, turned down the Queen’s offer to bestow them.
 

Zara Phillips and her brother Peter in 2003. Picture: AP Photo/PA, Ian West
Zara Phillips and her brother Peter in 2003. Picture: AP Photo/PA, Ian WestSource:AP

 

Meanwhile, Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have chosen to skip a title for their five-month-old son Archie, who is seventh-in-line to the throne, in a bid to provide him with the lifestyle of a private citizen.

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