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What King Charles’ Monarchy Can Learn From Danish Scandal

King Frederik and Queen Mary of Denmark

The King and Queen of Denmark faced criticism after slashing the number of charities they work with, cutting ties with major organizations that have supported the monarchy in the past, and it’s something the British royals might learn from.

Margrethe II abdicated as queen of Denmark on January 14, passing the crown to her son King Frederik X, supported by his wife Queen Mary.

With a new reign came a review of all the charities and organizations the Danish royals work with and some have been cut from the roster.

King Frederik X and Queen Mary at Frederik VIII’s Palace, Amalienborg, Copenhagen, Denmark, on May 26, 2024. The royal couple have cut 118 groups the royal household previously partnered with.

Martin Sylvest Andersen/Getty Images

Frederik and Mary raised eyebrows when they announced 118 have been dropped while 140 remain.

The bold move comes after King Charles III and aides have also reviewed the long list of patronages held by his mother Queen Elizabeth II before her death in November 2022.

The British royals may therefore want to keep an eye on how these big decisions go down in Denmark.

The Daily Mail, a major pro-monarchy title in Britain, appeared to react with some hostility to the Danish royal family’s decision, with an article suggesting the couple “have likely infuriated thousands of Danes.”

Historian Sebastian Olden-Jørgensen, an associate professor at the University of Copenhagen, told Danish news website B.T: “They [the organizations that have been dropped] will undoubtedly be upset.”

“Now they [the King and Queen] have to live up to this,” he added. “The royals must show that when you are a member of the royal house, you actually engage in the protectorates. And the fact that they will be time-limited is again a promise that there will be activity.”

Charles, however, can likely breathe a sigh of relief as he and other senior royals have reviewed more than 1,000 organizations and retained 834, including 376 positions previously held by Queen Elizabeth II, 367 held by Charles while he was Prince of Wales and 91 held by Queen Camilla when she was Duchess of Cornwall.

Frederik and Mary have scrapped a far greater percentage, keeping around 54 percent, and losing some high-profile affiliations, such as with Copenhagen Zoo, despite bosses naming a…

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