ByStephen Pollard, Stephen Pollard
I have a piece in The Times on Prince Charles. Here's an extract:
What is it with the Prince of Wales? He seems physically incapable of keeping his mouth shut. Yesterday he was ranting about genetically modified crops, multinationals and climate change. But it might equally have been architecture, education or McDonald's, three of his previous obsessions. Next week it'll no doubt be the price of gas. And why haven't we heard his views on Georgia?
The Prince is as entitled to his views as anyone. What he is not entitled to do is share them with us. This has nothing to do with whatever merit they might or might not have. It has everything to do with the fact that one day he will be King.
Do you know what his mother thinks about GM crops? Do you know what the Queen thinks about anything? Of course not. Unlike her son, she realises that the moment she enters the world of politics - which her son did the moment that he started to lecture us about how the world should be run - is the moment that the monarchy ceases to exist. The monarchy is supposed to be a unifying force. The Prince's interventions serve only to divide.
I've yet to hear Prince Charles decry the use of insulin for diabetics as a