Baby Prince George lands in New Zealand for first tour

Agence France-Presse

This is AI generated summarization, which may have errors. For context, always refer to the full article.

Baby Prince George lands in New Zealand for first tour
Prince William, Baby Prince George, and Duchess Catherine arrive in New Zealand for the start of a 3-week tour

WELLINGTON, New Zealand – Britain’s baby Prince George arrived in New Zealand with parents Prince William and Catherine on Monday for the eight-month-old’s first ever official tour, an Agence France-Presse (AFP) reporter said.

Strong winds, rain and poor visibility greeted the royals in Wellington at the start of a 3-week tour of New Zealand and Australia.

It will be one of the first times George, who is third in line to the throne, has been seen in public since his birth on July 22 last year. (READ: Chubby Prince George shown off at royal christening)

The baby will only be taken to a few specific engagements throughout the trip, the family’s Kensington Palace residence said.

For Kate, who stepped off the Royal New Zealand Air Force plane in a buttoned-up red coat and pill-box hat, it’s a first visit to either country, but William, second in line to the throne, has visited New Zealand and Australia several times.

Prince Charles and Princess Diana took him on their tour in March and April 1983 and his most recent trip was in 2011, when he comforted victims of the Christchurch earthquake and devastating floods in Australia.

The Duke and Duchess of Cambridge were treated like celebrities when they visited Canada soon after their wedding in 2011, while last year they toured Singapore, Malaysia, the Solomon Islands and Tuvalu as representatives of Queen Elizabeth II on her Diamond Jubilee.

Their visit has already sparked intense interest in New Zealand, with discussion ranging from whether George’s baby car seat has been correctly installed to whether the country should retain the monarchy.

Former deputy prime minister Don McKinnon said over the weekend that it was “inevitable” New Zealand would become a republic, even though people still felt great respect for the royals.

Prime Minister John Key said he did not believe change would happen any time soon, saying there was “robust support” for the monarchy in New Zealand which had increased in recent years.

“If you go back… maybe a decade and asked the question whether New Zealanders want to become a republic then I think the numbers would have been sixty-forty opposed,” he told public radio.

“If you asked that question today I think it would be 80-20 opposed.” – Rappler.com

Add a comment

Sort by

There are no comments yet. Add your comment to start the conversation.

Summarize this article with AI

How does this make you feel?

Loading
Download the Rappler App!