LONDON — Britain’s royal family has been forced to radically change the way it communicates because of social media, after speculation ran riot about the health of Catherine, Princess of Wales.
The 42-year-old princess, widely known as Kate, last week announced that she was receiving cancer treatment, two months after having abdominal surgery.
Her video statement, posted on Instagram, was a radical departure from the royal family’s reputed mantra of “never complain, never explain”.
But it has been seen as much-needed given the frenzied speculation and wild conspiracy theories circulating online.
Nick Couldry, professor of media, communications and social theory at the London School of Economics, said the manner in which something so personal was announced was “unprecedented” for the royals.
“There’s no doubt that the endless speculation and gossip on social media made it particularly important to make an announcement to end that speculation,” he told AFP.
Instead of not commenting, “the royal family now has to deal directly with what the people are saying about them via social media”, he added.
The royal family has traditionally kept its cards very close to its chest about the health of the sovereign and other senior members.
King George VI died in 1952 but it was only publicly revealed after the king’s death that he had lung cancer.
That strategy persisted until recently, with royal officials cryptically attributing Queen Elizabeth II’s increasing retreat from public life to “episodic mobility problems”.
She died in September 2022, aged 96, officially of “old age” although one well-connected royal commentator has said she had bone marrow cancer.
Elizabeth’s eldest son and successor King Charles III, however, has taken a different approach, announcing in January that he was to have surgery on a benign enlarged prostate.
In February, the palace revealed that tests had led to the discovery of cancer, although they did not specify which type or the prognosis.
The announcement about Kate’s admission to hospital for abdominal surgery was also via a traditional press statement, although it revealed little beyond how long she would stay in hospital and recuperate.
In both cases, royal officials have had to balance the king and princess’s right to privacy in medical matters and their public roles in how much they reveal.
But with Kate one of the world’s most photographed women and rarely out of the media spotlight, social media commentators have tried to fill in the gaps.
Her husband Prince William’s last-minute withdrawal for “personal reasons” in February from a memorial service for his late godfather King Constantine II of Greece set tongues wagging further.