Now WALES swipes at William and Kate over cross-Britain tour
No10 REFUSES to back Royal tour: Downing Street joins Wales and Scotland with subtle dig over Covid rules on Prince William and Kate Middleton’s UK tour – despite Britons being ‘honoured to welcome them’
- Prince William and Kate are in Cardiff to highlight how local tourism industry has coped during pandemic
- They are expected to end travels today with the Queen, and the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall
- But Welsh Health Minister Vaughan Gething has criticised decision to travel to Wales as Covid cases rise
- Nicola Sturgeon suggested they travelled to Edinburgh despite office being made aware of restrictions
Downing Street today refused to back the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge’s cross-Britain railway tour after Nicola Sturgeon and a Welsh minister suggested it could breach UK covid rules.
The Prime Minister’s official spokesman was asked repeatedly whether William and Kate’s visits to the home nations were Covid-19 compliant and said: ‘That’s a matter for the Palace. We set out clearly the tiers and the advice around the current guidelines that we are asking the public to abide by’.
But around an hour later No 10 performed a U-turn and backed their cross-Britain tour to thank frontline workers and the ‘morale boost’ it would provide.
‘The PM is delighted to see the warm reception the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge have received on their hugely valuable train tour of England, Scotland and Wales. The tour will be a welcome morale boost to frontline workers who have done so much during the pandemic’, the spokesman said.
The mixed-messages came after a Welsh minister swiped at William and Kate’s railiway journey, warning it must not be an ‘excuse’ for people to break coronavirus rules, one day after Nicola Sturgeon also appeared to criticise their morale-boosting trip.
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge take time to meet and pose for a photo with Otto Warner, 8, centre, who has today come out of cancer treatment and was by chance hoping to meet the royal couple with his family, including sisters Jasmine Warner, 5, left, Poppy, 10, right, and mum Georgie, far left, as William and Kate arrive at Bath Spa train station today
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge arrive at Cardiff Castle this morning as their royal train tour of Britain continues today
The Duchess of Cambridge is dressed in a long, bright red Alexander McQueen coat as she arrives at Cardiff Castle today
The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge attend a ‘Toast Your Own Marshmallow’ stall during a visit to Cardiff Castle this morning
Prince William and Kate meet students in Cardiff to discuss how their mental health was supported during lockdown
Health minister Vaughan Gething delivered a thinly-veiled rebuke to the royals after he was asked about their 48-hour rail trip stopping in England, Scotland and Wales.
Mr Gething told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘I’d rather that no-one was having unnecessary visits.’
He added: ‘People have views about the monarchy. But their visit isn’t an excuse for people to say they are confused about what they are being asked to do.’
Pressed on whether the royal couple should not be coming to Wales, he replied: ‘I’m not particularly that bothered or interested.
‘Because I don’t think that is going to be an excuse for people to say, ”I should go and behave in a different way”.’
The comments came after Nicola Sturgeon faced a backlash yesterday for a ‘rude’ and ‘petty’ jibe at the couple over their trip.
It came as the couple arrived at Cardiff Castle this morning as they continued their tour of Britain by royal train – thanking key and frontline workers and communities for their efforts during the pandemic.
William and Kate were in the Welsh capital to highlight how the local tourism industry has coped in the pandemic and meet students to discuss how their mental health was supported during lockdown.
Following their stop off in Wales, the couple moved onto Cleeve Court Care Home in Bath where they met residents including 94-year-old Ted Hogg and his support worker.
William and Kate have been travelling on board the Royal Train for on a nine-stop whirlwind, 48 hour, 1,250-mile tour across England, Scotland and Wales.
The Royals arrived in Edinburgh yesterday morning to the sound of bagpipes serenading them with Christmas songs, before meeting workers at a Scottish Ambulance Service hub.
The pair are attempting to spread festive cheer to frontline workers ahead of the Christmas holidays.
The tour is also designed to showcase the UK’s arts, heritage and live performance sector, which has been supported throughout the pandemic by the Government’s £1.57billion Culture Recovery Fund.
But Ms Sturgeon did not extend a welcome message to the couple during her daily briefing yesterday – despite being asked about the trip.
William and are undertaking a short tour of the UK ahead of the Christmas holidays, and stopped off in Cardiff this morning
Welsh Health Minister Vaughan Gething (left, on Saturday) criticised William and Kate’s decision to travel to Wales as Covid cases rise, while Scotland’s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon (right, at Western General Hospital in Edinburgh yesterday) did not extend a welcome message to the couple during her daily briefing yesterday
William and Kate board the royal train at London Euston railway station yesterday as the embark on the three-day tour
There is, however, a 12-steamer supper car with a Formica table
Although the train looks grand from the outside, its carriage are far more spartan than anyone could imagine
Royal guests have to make do with small single beds. There are no showers – instead there are rather dated-looking 70s-style baths with a marker line to stop them being over-filled
Instead, Ms Sturgeon said: ‘The Scottish Government was advised about the intention to visit, and we made sure that the Royal Household were aware, as you would expect, of the restrictions in place in Scotland so that could inform both the decision and the planning of the visit.’
‘Any more questions on that should be directed to the Royal household,’ she added.
The Scottish government said Ms Sturgeon did not try to stop the Royals from going to Scotland, adding she simply reiterated the guidance in place. A spokeswoman later said: ‘The First Minister welcomes the support shown by the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge for Scotland’s NHS.’
One Tory MP MP told MailOnline of Ms Sturgeon’s remarks: ‘This man is the future King of Scotland.
‘It is very unsubtle and I think it will backfire on her because there are a lot of loyalist Scots who would be pretty appalled that she would behave in such a rude manner. She should know better.’