LONDON - The Prince of Wales has been forced to defend his increasingly controversial role as a "campaigning" heir to the throne as Clarence House revealed his private income had risen to record levels.
Aides to Prince Charles said the £17.161 million ($37.6 million) generated from his private estates was evidence of his "prudent" and "steady" financial management in the face of a biting recession.
He had also found the time, they said, to write 1869 letters to ministers, property developers and members of the public.
His advisers mounted a robust defence of his prolific letter-writing, including one which had led to the withdrawal of an unpopular plan for the redevelopment of Chelsea Barracks in west London.
Sir Michael Peat, Charles' principal private secretary, said the Prince was expressing the views of local residents when he intervened over the multimillion-pound property development. The letter was referred to in a court case last week when the judge described it as both "unwelcome and unexpected".
Developers Qatari Diar Real Estate withdrew their planning application for the prestigious site after Charles wrote to the chairman, who is also the Prime Minister of Qatar, saying his "heart sank" when he saw the design.
But Peat said Prince Charles was voicing the views of "ordinary people" after concerned residents contacted him. He said: "It is part of the Prince of Wales' official duties to encourage and advise and warn and to make sure the views of ordinary people ... receive some exposure."
Lord Rogers, the architect of the design, said last week that Charles' determination to express views on his design for Chelsea Barracks was "wrong".
Constitutional experts were divided over the growing interventions of the Prince of Wales.
Professor Robert Hazell, director of the constitutional unit at UCL said: "This is a small constitutional innovation. The constitution is silent on the role and responsibilities of the deputy head of state. But I would think all constitutional experts would agree that he can't behave like this when he is sovereign because the sovereign has to be impeccably neutral."
Vernon Bogdanor, professor of government at the University of Oxford, also said as heir to the throne, Prince Charles must not venture into controversial party politics.
But, he added, "He has the duty and right to inform himself about government policy and he is probably the best-informed ever heir to the throne."
Bogdanor said he did not think that Prince Charles' letters to the Qataris had threatened the constitutional position of the deputy head of state. "He has expressed himself on matters of Shakespeare, alternative medicine and architecture, but I don't think any of these have been matters of controversial party politics."
The Duchy of Cornwall accounts revealed Prince of Wales' private income increased by more than 4 per cent last year but his funding from the taxpayer was almost halved, the Clarence House accounts showed.
Peat said that the reason for the dramatic fall in taxpayer funding for the Prince was due to lower spending on overseas travel. The figures also showed that the "net cash surplus" available to the Duchy of Cornwall - the landed estate given to the heir to the throne - increased to £229,000 from £157,000 the year before.
But Peat declined to disclose the value of further reserves held by the Prince which would have given a clearer picture of the state of the royal finances. Official expenditure fell from £12,513,000 to £10,723,000 in the last year. The Prince paid almost 13 per cent more tax in the last year, with his bill rising from £3,093,000 to £3,484,000.
Asked whether the economic downturn had affected the way the Prince's household had been run during the last year, Peat said: "Yes, absolutely. We are living in the real world. The Prince has tried to run his household and the Duchy of Cornwall in a constant, steady way. During the recession we're able to continue employing people rather than putting them on the dole, and to pay more tax rather than less tax."
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