Skip to main content
New political vistas open for post-Elizabethan Britain
HOWARD STEVENSON looks to Antonio Gramsci's writings for clues about the aftermath of the death of Elizabeth Windsor
End of an era? The Queen lying in state in Westminster Hall

FOR those who seek the radical transformation of society, the public displays of grief since the death of Elizabeth Windsor have been difficult to endure.

This is partly because the official national response is a direct affront to our views on what a genuine democratic society should look like.

But, also, because we are reminded of the extent to which ideas of deference to a hereditary head of state, and the incredibly limited notions of democracy that underpin this, are deeply embedded in the minds of large sections of the population.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You have reached the free limit.
Subscribe to continue reading.
Similar stories
The then Duke of York arriving for the Requiem Mass service for the Duchess of Kent, at Westminster Cathedral, central London, September 16, 2025
Editorial: / 1 February 2026
1 February 2026
starmer symptom
Books / 28 August 2025
28 August 2025

ANDREW MURRAY recommends a volume of essays that nail the visionless, racist and neoliberal character of policy under Starmer’s Labour Party

Gramsci
Book Review / 20 June 2025
20 June 2025

SETH SANDRONSKY savours a personal account of the life and thought of the great Italian revolutionary