King Charles will dedicate the year 2023 to the people, issues and causes raised in his first Christmas speech as King.
The king will use his first full year as sovereign to support key workers and those most vulnerable in society.
This suggests that as part of his royal duties he will be making visits to hospitals, social and health centers to support NHS workers, whom he praised in his first Christmas message, as well as other public services.
His Majesty also spoke on his Christmas show of helping society’s most marginalized and those hard hit by the cost of living crisis.
The king will use his first full year as sovereign support for key workers and the most vulnerable in society. He is pictured delivering his Christmas message, filmed at St George’s Chapel in Windsor Castle on December 13
The King spoke on his Christmas show of helping the most marginalized in society and those hard hit by the cost of living crisis. He is pictured visiting a London school in November 2022
The King will dedicate the next year to such causes alongside other members of the Royal Family including Camilla, the Queen consort, and William and Catherine, the Prince and Princess of Wales.
Following a difficult and emotional year for their family following the death of the late Queen, the royals will join forces to support and support projects across the UK that support those struggling in society.
The smaller group of working royals will unite around these important causes throughout 2023 and work to address the key issues the king outlined in the speech.
A source told the Mirror: “The King and the rest of the family want to reach out to the most marginalized in our communities and focus on helping the organizations most in need of support.
“After a tumultuous year not only for the royals but also for the country, it is clear from the King’s Christmas speech that unity must be at the heart of everything they do.”
The royals will join forces after a difficult year for their family to support and support projects across the UK that support those struggling in society. Pictured: The King and members of the Royal Family attend church in Sandringham on Christmas Day
In his Christmas message, he paid tribute to his mother and said he shares her “faith in people.”
He said: “It is the belief in the extraordinary capacity of every human being to touch the lives of others with kindness and compassion and to shine a light on the world around them.”
The king said we see it in “the selfless deployment of our armed forces and emergency services” to protect and keep the country safe.
He said he also sees this in “our health and social care professionals, our teachers and indeed all those who work in the public sector whose skills and dedication are at the heart of our communities.”
In addition to the heroic civil servants, the king also spoke of those who were struggling in society and the need to help the weak.
“At this time of great fear and need, whether for people around the world facing conflict, famine or natural disasters, or for those at home finding ways to pay their bills and feed and keep their families warm ‘let us see it in the humanity of the people of our nations and the Commonwealth who respond so readily to the needs of others.’
The King and Queen Consort visited a food bank which is part of the Trussel Trust just last year, December 2021
The King and Queen Consort made a grant from the Prince of Wales’ Charitable Fund, as well as a “significant personal donation” to food banks across the country. They are pictured visiting a food bank in December last year
The King continued in his Christmas address: “I would like to pay special tribute to all those wonderfully kind people who so generously give food or donations or that most precious of goods, their time, to join hands with helping those most in need around them many charities doing such extraordinary work under the most difficult of circumstances.’
This is not the first time the king has emphasized the need to help the marginalized in society.
Just weeks ago, the King and Queen Consort made a grant from the Prince of Wales’ Charitable Fund to food banks across the country, alongside a “substantial personal donation”.
The funds were used to buy fridges and freezers for food banks and charities to stock more food and distribute to those in need.