King invites PM and leaders of devolved governments to Windsor Castle

King invites PM and leaders of devolved governments to Windsor Castle
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King invites PM and leaders of devolved governments to Windsor Castle
Published: Feb, 11 2025 20:56

King Charles will host the prime minister and the first ministers of the devolved governments at Windsor Castle on Wednesday night, Sky News understands. The monarch has invited John Swinney, the Scottish first minister, to the Berkshire royal residence, along with Northern Irish First Minister Michelle O'Neill, Northern Irish Deputy First Minister Emma Little-Pengelly and Welsh first minister Eluned Morgan, it is understood.

The King hosts a number of informal dinners at Windsor Castle for a wide variety of guests from across the arts, science, charity and politics each year. Politics latest: No 10 says it will work with Trump on tariffs. Please use Chrome browser for a more accessible video player. However, the latest event risks adding fuel to the criticism that the King is intervening in politics after he joined Sir Keir Starmer and his deputy Angela Rayner on a rare engagement to see a housing project in Cornwall on Monday.

The monarch Sir Keir and Ms Rayner carried out three engagements in Nansledan, a 540-acre extension to the seaside town of Newquay. The visit is understood to have followed conversations about housing over the past few months between King Charles and Sir Keir, during which the Nansledan project was mentioned. Sue Gray takes up seat in House of Lords - and receives new title. Sir Keir Starmer takes HIV test in effort to reduce stigma.

Why sacked minister's outrageous comments will concern Starmer. The joint trip came ahead of the government outlining further measures to meet its target to build 1.5m homes over the next five years. The monarch famously does not intervene in political matters and remains politically neutral under the constitutional monarchy - but critics have claimed the visit risked dragging the King into politics. Asked whether making the visit ahead of the announcement risked that perception, the prime minister's official spokesperson said: "No".

They added: "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, it is a key part of the plan for change to deliver 1.5m homes, to tackle the housing crisis that we've inherited, to drive economic growth across the country.". Read more:Labour suspends 11 councillors over WhatsApp scandalSue Gray takes up seat in House of Lords.

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