Elizabeth II Turned Royal Restraint Into Diplomatic Power
Royal biographer Hugo Vickers argues that Elizabeth II’s statecraft rested on restraint: saying little, appearing above politics, and using ceremony to create room for ministers and officials to act. In this Secrets of Statecraft conversation with Andrew Roberts, Vickers extends that argument to King Charles III, casting monarchy’s diplomatic value as the ability to open doors without seeming to negotiate policy. His account presents the Crown not as an alternative government, but as a constitutional instrument whose power depends on discipline, ambiguity, and the public weight of duty.
Hoover Institution·Jun 3, 2026·24 min read