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Queen set to withdraw from public duties ‘for months’

It will be the longest break in her 68-year reign

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The Queen is set to withdraw from public duties for months, remaining at Windsor Castle indefinitely as the coronavirus crisis continues in the UK.

It is anticipated to be the monarch’s longest absence in her 68-year reign.

Queen VE Day address
The Queen will reportedly have her duties suspended for months (Credit: BBC)

Read more: Our Queen At War documentary makes Brits proud

Buckingham Palace will close to the public this summer for the first time seemingly in almost 30 years.

Events such as Trooping the Colour and the Order of the Garter service have already been cancelled.

Royal Ascot will only take place behind closed doors, if it goes ahead.

The Sunday Times reports that her diary of engagements into the autumn is also on hold.

Plans for a state visit to South Africa in October hang in the balance.

On Friday night (May 8), the Queen delivered her second rousing television speech to the nation in a month.

Marking the 75th anniversary of VE Day, her Majesty told us to “never give up, never despair”.

Queen VE Day
The Queen told the nation on VE Day not to give up (Credit: Splash)

The 94-year-old added that the Second World War heroes would be proud of how today’s Brits have handled the coronavirus crisis.

Speaking from Windsor Castle, the Queen compared the “jubilant scenes” of 1945 to today’s lockdown.

I speak to you today at the same hour as my father did, exactly 75 years ago.

She said today’s streets are “filled with the love and the care that we have for each other”.

She then added: “Never give up, never despair — that was the message of VE Day.”

During the two-minute address, Queen Elizabeth said: “I speak to you today at the same hour as my father did, exactly 75 years ago.

‘Great deliverance’

“His message then was a salute to the men and women at home and abroad who had sacrificed so much in pursuit of what he rightly called a ‘great deliverance’.

“The war had been a total war; it had affected everyone, and no one was immune from its impact.

“Whether it be the men and women called up to serve, families separated from each other, or people asked to take up new roles and skills to support the war effort, all had a part to play.

“At the start, the outlook seemed bleak, the end distant, the outcome uncertain.

“But we kept faith that the cause was right — and this belief, as my father noted in his broadcast, carried us through. Never give up, never despair — that was the message of VE Day.

“I vividly remember the jubilant scenes my sister and I witnessed with our parents and Winston Churchill from the balcony of Buckingham Palace.

the queen
The Queen rallied the nation on VE Day (Credit: Splash)

Further sacrifice

“The sense of joy in the crowds who gathered outside and across the country was profound, though while we celebrated the victory in Europe, we knew there would be further sacrifice.

“It was not until August that fighting in the Far East ceased and the war finally ended.

“Many people laid down their lives in that terrible conflict. They fought so we could live in peace, at home and abroad. They died so we could live as free people in a world of free nations.

We will remember them

“They risked all so our families and neighbourhoods could be safe. We should and will remember them.

“As I now reflect on my father’s words and the joyous celebrations, which some of us experienced first-hand, I am thankful for the strength and courage that the United Kingdom, the Commonwealth and all our allies displayed.

“The wartime generation knew the best way to honour those who did not come back from the war was to ensure it didn’t happen again.

“The greatest tribute to their sacrifice is that countries who were once sworn enemies are now friends, working side by side for the peace, health and prosperity of us all.”

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Kaggie Hyland
Editor-in-Chief