Queen’s ‘quiet resolution’ receives widespread support
Published: 21:36, 05 April 2020
Updated: 14:30, 14 April 2020
Figures from the worlds of politics and entertainment have united behind the Queen’s message to “remain united and resolute” amid the coronavirus pandemic.
The Queen’s address to the nation on Sunday evening prompted a flurry of tweets about her sentiments.
“The Queen speaks for the whole country and our determination to defeat the coronavirus,” new Labour leader Sir Keir Starmer tweeted.
Trade Secretary Liz Truss described the message as “inspiring”, while Nadine Dorries MP – who tested positive for Covid-19 earlier in March – said it was “perfect” and adding: “We really are all #InThisTogether.”
Former Scottish Conservative leader Ruth Davidson said the speech had surprised her.
“The Queen’s own quiet resolution on how we will see the other side of this and ‘meet again’ was reassuring, I thought,” she wrote.
“Didn’t know I needed to hear that, but it turns out I did.”
Mayor of London Sadiq Khan praised the Queen’s recognition of front-line workers during the pandemic.
“Great to see our hardworking heroes, working flat-out on the frontline, front & centre of the #QueensSpeech,” he wrote.
But it wasn’t just the political sphere that reacted positively to the monarch’s words.
“God I love Mrs Queen,” Jeremy Clarkson tweeted.
Presenter and poker champion Victoria Coren Mitchell was enthusiastic, posting: “Hurray for the Queen! I thought that speech was terrific.”
The message travelled overseas too, with Queer Eye star Jonathan Van Ness tweeting “Watching the queens speech” alongside a wistful gif of himself.
In a rare televised address to the country and Commonwealth, the Queen sounded a positive note after what has been an unsettling period, saying: “We will succeed – and that success will belong to every one of us.”
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