In Liverpool, Eurovision Song Contest, not the King’s coronation, is the big ticket in town


Throughout Liverpool, the brightly coloured flags and banners hang from the street posts and are plastered on walls, promoting a major celebration that will draw in millions of international viewers.

The city in northwest England is getting ready for a crowning, but it’s not a coronation.

Starting on May 9, Liverpool will be hosting the popular Eurovision Song Contest, where singers representing 37 countries compete in an often over-the-top musical extravaganza.

It’s hosting the spectacular instead of Ukraine — which won last year’s event and was therefore in line to welcome competitors next week — but security concerns over Russia’s invasion in February 2022 made the move to Liverpool necessary.

“It is really exciting for all the whole country,” said Emily Herbert, 25, as she took in a rehearsal underway for some of the entertainment as part of the 10-day Eurovision festival that is running alongside the competition.

“We have never had anything like this, not in our lifetime anyway.”

Construction crews are busy erecting a Eurovision village that will act as a party zone for fans who failed to get tickets to the sold-out semifinal and final events. The final is set for May 13.

‘Animosity to anything royal’

On Saturday, the large screen that was installed for Eurovision will air the coronation ceremony in London of King Charles III, but it’s not clear how many people will attend, since, according to polls, Liverpool is far from the most enthusiastic supporter of the British monarchy.

“I imagine Eurovision will be a lot more popular than coronation here for sure,” said Elliot Barrett, 23, who spoke to CBC News as he sat and chatted with a friend during Monday’s public holiday in the United Kingdom.

Barrett said he believes his parents care even less about the Royal Family than he does.

Elliot Barrett, left, and his friend, Sasha Lawdermilk, are shown in Liverpool on Monday. The 23-year-old says he believes his parents care even less about the Royal Family than he does. (Jean-François Bisson/CBC)

“Compared to London, Liverpool is going to be a lot more apathetic, antagonistic,” he said. “There is going to be a lot more animosity to anything royal or regal.”

Liverpool, a northern port community that was frequently dubbed the second city of the British Empire in the 19th century, has a complex history when it comes to its relationship  with the British government.

Political experts and Liverpudlians themselves say turmoil and protests in the 1970s and ’80s against Margaret Thatcher’s Conservative government gave rise to an anti-authoritarian, anti-British sentiment that still persists among part of the population today.

While everyone who spoke to CBC News said they don’t believe that attitude is dominant throughout Liverpool, it does frequently translate into anti-monarchist views.

A corner window display of a business displays two signs, as pedestrians outside walk by. One is a yellow sign that reads: Proud to Welcome Eurovision. The other features the king's guards and the words: A Right Royal Celebration.
A window display at Marks & Spencer in downtown Liverpool highlights Eurovision, which the city is hosting starting May 9, and the coronation of King Charles on Saturday. (Jean-François Bisson/CBC)

A poll conducted by the data collection and analysis firm Focaldata for the British news and opinion website Unherd estimated that just 38 per cent of respondents living in the Liverpool-Riverside constituency agreed or strongly agreed that the monarchy is a good thing for Britain, compared with the national average of 55 per cent.

In Liverpool-Riverside, 32 per cent of people were neutral on the issue.

In a prior poll conducted in 2019, the same Liverpool constituency ranked as the least supportive region of the monarchy in the United Kingdom.

Football fans aren’t fans of monarchy

Fans of the Liverpool football club frequently boo the national anthem, which is now God Save the King, and last year they booed Prince William, who was taking part in a ceremony before the FA Cup final at Wembley Stadium.

The team will be playing a home game at Anfield stadium on Saturday, and the club is considering whether to play the national anthem — as the Premier League has requested — and risk the sound of booing being broadcast live on a national sports channel just a few hours after King Charles is officially crowned at Westminster Abbey.

“Liverpool has never been fearful of expressing its opinions,” said Peter Dwyer, a Liverpool season ticket-holder who is originally from the city but now lives in Oxford, England.

A man wearing a pink T-shirt and black windbreaker smiles as he poses in the stands of a busy soccer stadium. In the background, players can be seen on the field.
Peter Dwyer is shown at a Liverpool football match on April 30. The anti-monarchist says he’ll be on vacation outside of the U.K. during the coronation to avoid the festivities. (Submitted by Peter Dwyer)

Dwyer was in the crowd in May 2022, when Prince William was booed, and said it sounded like most people at the stadium were taking part.

He told CBC News his father used to attend Liverpool matches in the 1930s, and said that back then, fans would frequently change the lyrics of God Save the King to “God save our Team.”

Dwyer said while he doesn’t want to overstate the issue, he admits that among football fans, many have a deep-seated “anger and bitterness” toward those in power.

It stems from the initial handling of the Hillsborough disaster, he said, when 97 football fans in Sheffield, England, were killed by a crush of people in an overcrowded section of the stadium on April 15, 1989.

Liverpool fans were initially blamed for the disaster by the police and even some members of the media, but eventually an independent inquiry found that a police commander’s poor decisions around crowd management led to the tragedy.

Dwyer said the initial reaction created mistrust — which carries over to the government and often to the royals.

A crowd of people stand behind barricades holding yellow signs that read, Not My King.'
Protesters wait for King Charles and Camilla, the Queen Consort, to arrive at the Liverpool Central Library on April 26. The couple officially marked the library’s twinning with Ukraine’s first public library, the Regional Scientific Library in Odesa. (Jon Super/Pool/The Associated Press)

As a self-described anti-monarchist, he planned a vacation outside of the U.K. so he didn’t have to be around during the coronation festivities.

“It will ratchet up this week,” he said. “I can’t bear to be in the country.”

Schoolchildren cheer Charles, Camilla

In Liverpool, some Union Jack flags hang near a mall, and some stores — particularly national chains — carry coronation promotions, but there isn’t a lot of visible fanfare.

When Charles and Camilla, who will become Queen on Saturday, visited Liverpool on April 26, they helped to unveil the Eurovision stage and said they would be watching the competition.

As part of their tour in the hometown of the Beatles, they were cheered by schoolchildren but also jeered by protesters with the anti-monarchy group Republic.

Holly Lucas, a head teacher at a local primary school, took her students to wave flags during the visit by the King and Queen Consort.

While stopping in at a local coffee shop, she told CBC News it was exciting for the children to take part but that Liverpool isn’t as much into the Royal Family as the rest of the U.K.

“It is a political thing,” Lucas said. “People would appreciate more support. Liverpool gets a bit of a bad reputation down south.”

Angry crowds ‘not representative’ of city

Liverpool, which saw its industrial economy collapse in the 1970s and ’80s, along with the departure of tens of thousands of people, has experienced population growth over the past decade.

The city’s downtown includes a mix of students and young families, along with some areas of poverty, according to David Jeffery, a senior lecturer in British politics at the University of Liverpool.

He said the city’s strong Irish population contributes to the idea that many in Liverpool don’t see themselves as British but rather as “Scouse,” a nickname that refers to both the local accent and a Liverpudlian’s cultural identity.

A man wearing a burgundy coat and a black scarf poses for a portrait in a park.
David Jeffery, a senior lecturer at the University of Liverpool, says the city’s strong Irish population contributes to the notion that many Liverpudlians don’t see themselves as British. (Jean-François Bisson/CBC)

Jeffery said research has shown that Scousers tend to be more left-wing and often step outside the “established rules and norms.”

While the boos from football crowds are loud, he said, what a group of “mainly middle-aged … white men do in a crowd situation … is not representative of the city as a whole.”

Instead, Jeffery said, he believes the dominant feeling toward the monarchy is probably apathy.

“Most people, I think, are just happy to leave the status quo, really,” he told CBC News during an interview on campus.

He said it’s important to consider that any debate around the future of the monarchy is taking place at a time of rising inflation — and when many Brits are unhappy with the way the government is working.

“If that’s all sorted by the time we get King William, then maybe the debates will have settled down then.”



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