Showing posts with label Queen of England. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Queen of England. Show all posts

Tuesday, January 28, 2014

Is the Queen going broke? With royal palaces 'crumbling and leaky' and the Queen down to her last £1 million, what lies ahead for the British monarch

Queen down and out? UK royal palaces ‘crumbling and leaky’ as her finances dwindle
RT NEWS
January 28, 2014

Britain's Queen Elizabeth II.(Reuters / Philip Toscano)
Britain's Queen Elizabeth II.(Reuters / Philip Toscano)
Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II, long thought to be one of the world’s richest women, is apparently down to her last million in savings, with palaces leaking and falling to pieces as MPs say she has been failed by her advisers and the Treasury.

The Queen’s courtiers have been advised to take money saving tips from the UK treasury, as her finances dip to an historic low with just £1 million left in reserve, the Telegraph reported.

A report by the Commons Public Accounts Committee found that her reserve fund had fallen from £35 million in 2001 to £1 million today. While the Royal household had made efficiency savings of just 5 percent over the past five years, government departments have made savings of up to a third.

MPs on the committee said that the Treasury must help to protect royal palaces from further damage and deterioration.

“We believe that the Treasury has a duty to be actively involved in reviewing the household’s financial planning and management – and it has failed to do so,” said Margaret Hodge, the Labour chairperson of the committee.

Buckingham Palace and Windsor Castle are both in a terrible state of repair with staff required to catch rain in buckets to protect art and antiquities.

Meanwhile, in Buckingham Palace the 60-year-old boilers were running up bills of £774,000 a year and the wiring has not been replaced since 1949. More than a third of the royal estate has been found to be below “target condition.”

The committee compared Buckingham Palace, which has just 500,000 visitors a year, to the Tower of London, which has more than £2 million.

“If you look at the Tower of London and its visitor numbers it makes you think that there’s potential here. Have they done their darnedest to maximize value for money?” Hodge said.

The report also found that the royal household has not even attempted to cost up its huge backlog of repairs because it believed there was no point in doing so until it has new funding in place.

The Crown Estate gets 15 percent of its income from the Sovereign Grant, which replaced the old way of funding the Royal Family through the civil list in 2012.

While the Royal Household’s net expenditure was £33.3 million last year, £31 million of this came from the Sovereign Grant. To find the difference, it had to dip into its reserve fund.

A spokesman for Buckingham Palace insisted that the Sovereign Grant had made the Queen’s funding “more transparent and scrutinized” and was resulting in a “more efficient use of public funds.”

But the committee found that much more needs to be done if the Crown Estate and the Royal Household are to properly manage the Queen’s finances.

“We got the impression that they just haven’t tried to make greater savings. Here we are, we’re all in it together, but they are failing to eke out better value for the Queen. They are dipping into their reserves in a way that just isn’t sensible,” Hodge said.

The report found that the Treasury was not doing its job properly. It is responsible for overseeing the Royal Household finances but is not doing enough and should draw on its extensive experience and “offer advice on key packages.”

“The Household needs to get better at planning and managing its budgets for the longer term – and the Treasury should be more actively involved in reviewing what the household is doing,” Hodge said.

Number crunching
A closer look at both the report and the figures in it reveals that the Queens finances may be healthier than the Committee found, and in areas where she has lost money it is not the fault of the Treasury but of her managers, the Guardian reports.

The report its self was compiled from a series of questions and answers with just two witness giving the answers, Sir Alan Reid, Keeper of the Privy Purse and Mike Stevens, Deputy Treasurer to the Queen.

When asked why they did not cut back their expenditure, Sir Alan Reid replies: “We really believed that it is not wise to cut back on the level of activity of the monarchy.”

The figure of 1 million pounds does not accurately reflect the value of assets held by the Royal Household, the Guardian says. Their total reserves stand at 14.2 million pounds, 11.8 million pounds of which comes from property, plant and other equipment.The biggest chunk of royal spending goes on payroll, and although staff numbers remained unchanged over the past year cost have risen considerably.

Austin Mitchell, one of the members of the committee, asked: “It looks to me that you managed to survive and manage the finances by letting the buildings deteriorate, by freezing the staff costs and by digging into the reserves. Is that a fair summary of what has happened?”

To which Sir Alan replied, “I think that does summarize, to a degree, what happened last year.”

Saturday, April 7, 2012

UK Queen, French cook’s granddaughter? (Press TV)

Press TV
Sat Apr 7, 2012 1:36PM GMT

The British Queen has received a rapturous welcome in York marking her Diamond Jubilee while a British biographer has claimed that her mother was the daughter of her aristocratic family’s French cook.

Celebrating her 60 years of reign, the British Queen distributed silver coins known as the Royal Maundy money to people from all of the UK’s 44 Christian dioceses as it is suggested that her grandmother has been the British royal family’s French cook.

Aristocratic biographer Lady Colin Campbell has claimed that the royal family’s cook, an “attractive and pleasant Frenchwoman” called Marguerite Rodiere, has been Queen Mother’s real mother.

The claims are made in Campbell’s recent book “The Queen Mother, The untold story of Elizabeth Bowes Lyon, Who became Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother” due to be on sale next month.

The excerpts of the book were revealed as the British Queen held a service of remembrance for her mother on Friday 30 March to mark the 10th anniversary of her death.

Campbell said the claim explains why the Duke and Duchess of Windsor had been given the nickname ‘Cookie’ to the Queen Mother and why the Queen Mother, born the Honourable Elizabeth Angela Marguerite Bowes Lyon, was given a French middle name.

In her book, Campbell said the French Cook giving birth to the Queen Mother may have been “an early version of surrogacy” because her own mother Cecilia has not been able to have any more children.

For the fact is, royal and aristocratic circles had been alight for decades with the story that Elizabeth Bowes Lyon, while undoubtedly the daughter of the 14th Earl of Strathmore and Kinghorne, was not the child of his wife Cecilia, nor was her younger brother David, born nearly two years after her on 2nd May, 1902,” wrote Campbell.

Campbell has been known for her revealing biographies since she raised the ire of Britain’s royal family with her biography of Princess of Wales Diana in 1992.

ISH/PKH/HE