![]() ![]() GB News deleted a tweet with Starkey’s remarks within an hour but it was swiftly screen-grabbed and shared by critics on Twitter. In 1953, many more MPs were invited to the late Queen’s coronation. It was reported that the slimmed-down figure had caused uproar among the parliamentarians. ![]() It was reported in February that around 80 MPs and peers are invited to the coronation. The prime minister, who was born in Southampton to African-born Hindu parents of Indian Punjabi descent, will be reading a passage from the Bible during the coronation. ![]() And, again, this coronation is going to highlight far too much our differences rather than what unites us.”Īsked if he was speaking “in terms of religion”, the 78-year-old agreed: “In terms of religion.”Ĭharles is the head of the Church of England, while Sunak is Hindu. “I know that’s a difficult and controversial thing to say, but I think it’s true. “The prime minister, the man of immense talent, of extraordinary skill, but really, not fully grounded in our culture,” he continued. I think one of the reasons that I think a lot has gone wrong, for example, why parliament has not been properly represented at the coronation of a parliamentary monarchy, is because the government isn’t interested in the constitution. Sitting outside Buckingham Palace, Starkey replied: “Invisible. The host, journalist and commentator Andrew Pierce, put it to Starkey that the prime minister had been “detached, or at least semi-detached, from this coronation”. ![]()
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