Queen of England Drops 'Bomb' In EU Referendum Debate

It is
becoming a familiar routine - the Queen drops a bomb into a hotbed of
political argument, only for Buckingham Palace to insist the monarch is
"above politics"; that anyone seeking a political message in her speech
will be disappointed.Days before the Scottish
referendum, the Queen suggested that people should "think very
carefully" before casting their vote, a suggestion that was widely
interpreted as urging the Scots not to do anything rash.
It was
inevitable that a speech about the dangers of "division" in Europe would
be seen as a shot across the bows of those arguing for the UK to leave
the European Union, for all the Palace's protestations.
The timing
makes the Queen's words particularly resonant, coming as they do on the
eve of a European Council meeting at which David Cameron will lay out
his proposed reforms to other European leaders.
Palace officials
point out that the Queen was referring to Europe as a whole in exhorting
leaders to avoid the dangers of division, and not the European Union
alone.
As she spoke of the "common endeavour" of safeguarding the
postwar inheritance, the Queen looked up and seemed pointedly to fix the
political leaders, as though to say: "David, Angela - you know what to
do."
As for the specifics of their common endeavour of ensuring the
UK remains within a reformed European Union, the meeting in Brussels
represents a key staging point.
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