King Charles says UK will ‘always be one of France’s closest allies and best friends’ in historic speech to Senate | World News


The King has said the late Queen’s “golden thread will forever shine brightly” in the first ever speech by a British monarch to the French Senate. 

Addressing politicians from both the upper and the lower houses of parliament, the King said the UK will always be one of France’s “best friends”.

“Ours is a partnership forged through shared experience, and one which remains utterly vital as, together, we confront the challenges of our world,” he said.



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King Charles arrives to deliver a speech to members of parliament at the French Senate

“Quite simply, the United Kingdom will always be one of France’s closest allies and best friends.”

Speaking less than two weeks after the anniversary of his mother’s death, the King thanked “the people of France for the great kindness you showed to us, and our people, at a time of such grief”.

“When my mother died almost exactly one year ago, my family and I were moved beyond measure by the tributes that were paid to her across France.

“This morning, I read again the deeply touching words of condolence that Your Excellencies, Presidents of the National Assembly and the Senate, wrote at that time.

“You described Her late Majesty as having embodied the dignity of our own democracy and that as ‘she loved France, France loved her’. I can hardly describe how much these words meant to me, and to my entire family,” the King said.

“Inspired and encouraged by my grandmother’s and my late mother’s example, France has been an essential part of the fabric of my own life for as long as I can remember,” he added on his 35th official visit to the country.

“Each and every time, I have been struck by the warmth of the welcome I have always received, and by the immense good that can be accomplished when France and the United Kingdom work together.



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President of the French National Assembly Yael Braun-Pivet (right) and France’s Senate President Gerard Larcher (left) greet the King

“Now, on the occasion of my first state visit to France, my belief in the indispensable relationship between our countries is as firm as it has ever been.”

The King also referenced comments made by General Charles de Gaulle from London in 1940 after the Battle of France.

He said: “Today, in confronting the greatest challenges of our time, we continue the work of those who came before us.

“When General de Gaulle spoke to the French people from London in June of 1940, he said, ‘remember this, France does not stand alone. She is not isolated… she can make common cause with the British’.”

The King and Queen will then head to Saint-Denis, north of Paris, to meet community sports groups and stars as France hosts the Rugby World Cup.



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King Charles arrives at the French Senate

He will later visit the Paris flower market named after Queen Elizabeth II and rejoin French president Emmanuel Macron – who he was with during a banquet last night – in front of Notre-Dame Cathedral to see the ongoing renovation work aimed at reopening the monument by the end of next year, after it was devastated by a fire in 2019.

It comes after Charles attended a ceremony at Paris’ Arc de Triomphe and the dinner at the Palace of Versailles yesterday on the first day of the visit.

The King will end his trip on Friday with a stop in Bordeaux, the southwestern city that is home to a large British community.



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King Charles and Emmanuel Macron attending a remembrance ceremony at Arc de Triomphe Paris, France yesterday

The trip was previously postponed due to widespread riots in March.

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