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The Guardian - AU
The Guardian - AU
Business
Jonathan Yerushalmy

‘Charlie is my darling’: what the papers say on king’s coronation day

Composite of newspapers the Sun, the Daily Telegraph, the Guardian, the Times, i weekend, Daily Mirror, Daily Record and Daily Mail
Composite of newspapers (clockwise from top left): the Sun, the Daily Telegraph, the Guardian, the Times, i weekend, Daily Mirror, Daily Record and Daily Mail. Composite: The Sun/iweekend/Daily Mirror/The Daily Record/Daily Mail/The Times/The Daily Telegraph/The Guardian

The coronation of King Charles III dominates UK front pages on Saturday. Headlines across the major papers swing between adulation and scepticism as the country counts down to the event.

The Guardian leads on the aftermath of the local elections, with the prime minister, Rishi Sunak, under pressure after a “Crushing result for the Tories”, but elsewhere the front page promises a guide to the ceremony, as well as comment from Marina Hyde.

The paper is also publishing a 20-page coronation supplement, under the headline “Long may he reign over us?”

Not to be outdone, the Telegraph is promising an 84-page supplement. Under the headline “I come not to be served but to serve”, the paper’s royal editor outlines the lavish detail of the ceremony, while reporting that Harry, the Duke of Sussex, is expected to be in the UK for just “24 hours before returning to the US”.

The Times calls it the “King’s day of destiny”. The paper reports that Charles “has spent years planning every detail of his coronation” and that the event will be “the biggest military ceremonial operation since the funeral of Sir Winston Churchill in 1965”.

The Mail carries an almost identical headline with “His day of destiny”, above a full page image of Charles, aged 20, at his investiture as Prince of Wales in 1969.

Under the headline “Charlie is my darling”, Scotland’s Daily Record reports that “Hundreds of Scots have flocked to London”, joining about 1.2 million others “hoping for a glimpse of history”.

Above a full-page image of the crown, the Mirror writes: “He will not only wear the crown, he will bear the weight of history… and the hopes of a nation.”

The weight of that responsibility is outlined in the i: “Charles III in battle to secure future of monarchy”. Polling for the paper shows that most of the UK public still backs the monarchy, “but one in four has become less supportive under Charles”.

Finally, the Sun chooses to commemorate the day with pictures of King Charles’s and Queen Camilla’s crowns, under the headline “His & hers”.

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