The cheek of it: australian charity chief denies touches Prince’s bottom
Coming face-to-face with Prince Charles when you have publicly called him an “unashamed adulterer” would have to take the cake.
After meeting Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione at the Mounted Police Unit in Redfern, Prince Charles requested the opportunity to visit the Lindt café, and NSW Premier Mike Baird agreed to the visit, the Telegraph reported.
The Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall will finish their Australian tour on Sunday with several engagements scheduled in Perth’s CBD.
In 1992 the then Australian prime minister Paul Keating earned the nickname The Lizard Of Oz after he touched the Queen’s back at an event during her visit to Canberra.
And goodness, everybody knows November 11 is six weeks after the official end to the Australian truffle season. On Wednesday, they’ll attend an event observing Remembrance Day, tour the National Museum and meet with various politicians.
Saturday marks Prince Charles’ 67th birthday, but instead of the usual Royal festivities, the Prince and his wife Camilla will enjoy a relaxed celebration with a beach barbeque. Australia is “more forward-thinking” than the royals, he said.
Next stop was a visit to the Albany Agriculture Show, where their royal highnesses watched a log chopping demonstration before Camilla slipped off to look at local crafts and horse jumping.
While in the capital Canberra, The Prince of Wales was welcomed onto the tarmac at a military base by Turnbull, who tried to avoid any questions about this support for having an Australian-born head of state instead of the Prince. “He said he remembered – and I said, “so long ago?’ He said ‘yes”, wheelchair-bound Dunne told the Sydney Morning Herald, adding that she also spoke to Camilla.
Mrs Oakley said Prince Charles had said he could not have wished for a better place to spend his birthday and that it was “a bit cooler than Perth”.
‘So perhaps in view of this, I could ask all of you just (to) observe one minute’s silence in memory of all those who have been affected and lost their lives’. The Duchess described hers as “refined and elegant”. “He was really normal, just like us, and said he has Angus Cattle”.
Inside the building, Charles and Camilla sipped organic wine and nibbled on locally produced cheese.