Okay, this is a shameless pitch for traffic. Here's the schedule for the royal wedding, which starts in about 40 minutes at 10:10 am BST. Below, I have embedded the livestream video of the wedding so that you can all watch it right here.
The Royal Wedding Schedule: (All Times BST) 10:10 - Prince William and Prince Harry leave Clarence House for Westminster Abbey. 10:15 - Prince William and Prince Harry arrive at the Abbey. 10:20 - Members of foreign royal families arrive at Westminster Abbey from Buckingham Palace. 10:20 - Kate Middleton's mother, Carole, and brother, James, leave the Goring Hotel for Westminster Abbey. 10:25 - Minor members of the Royal Family leave Buckingham Palace for Westminster Abbey. 10:35 - The Duke of York and his daughters, Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie, leave for Westminster Abbey along with the Earl and Countess of Wessex, the Princess Royal and Vice-Admiral Timothy Laurence. 10:38 - The Prince of Wales and the Duchess of Cornwall leave Clarence House for Westminster Abbey. 10:40 - The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh leave Buckingham Palace for Westminster Abbey. 10:48 - The bridesmaids and pages leave the Goring Hotel for Westminster Abbey. 10:51 - The bride, accompanied by her father Michael, leaves the Goring Hotel for Westminster Abbey. 11:00 - The marriage service begins and is relayed by speakers along the route. 12:15 - The carriage procession of the bride and bridegroom with a captain's escort of the Household Cavalry, followed by the Queen's procession with a sovereign's escort of the Household Cavalry, leaves Westminster Abbey for Buckingham Palace. 12:30 - The bride's carriage procession arrives at Buckingham Palace. 12:40 - Members of the Royal Family and members of foreign royal families arrive at Buckingham Palace. 13:25 - The Queen and the bride and bridegroom, together with their families, appear on the balcony. 13:30 - Fly-past by the Royal Air Force and Battle of Britain Memorial Flight.
Would you believe that both Israel Radio and Television are broadcasting this live?
Okay, I have three livestreams for you. Let's go to the videotape.
The last two livestreams are both from Hulu, and if you are outside the US you may have problems accessing them. If you have problems, go here for solutions.
Tony Blair, Gordon Brown not invited to royal wedding because....
Britain's two most recent Prime Ministers, Tony Blair and Gordon Brown, are not invited to Friday's royal wedding between Prince William and Kate Middleton.
There are two different explanations for the non-invite. According to al-Guardian, it's all a matter of protocol.
Ministerial sources accused Clarence House of a blunder in declining to invite Labour's longest serving prime minister and his successor because they are not Knights of the Garter.
Sir John Major and Baroness Thatcher, who are members of Britain's highest order of chivalry, have been invited. Major, appointed guardian to Princes William and Harry after the death of their mother, will attend. Thatcher will not attend on health grounds.
One senior Whitehall source told the Guardian: "This is courtier lunacy. It beggars belief that St James's Palace is saying … that the wedding is not a formal state occasion and … that Tony Blair and Gordon Brown have not been invited because they are not Knights of the Garter."
Labour MPs have rejected a claim by St James's Palace that it is wrong to draw a parallel with the royal wedding in 1981 when all five former surviving prime ministers were invited. Harold Macmillan, Alec Douglas-Home, Harold Wilson, Edward Heath and James Callaghan attended the Prince of Wales's marriage to Lady Diana Spencer which was a formal state occasion because he is heir to the throne.
Chris Bryant, Labour's former Europe minister, told the Daily Mail: "Those who have been prime minister have served this country, and I think that the same proprieties that have been followed on previous occasions should have been followed again."
There is, however, a perfectly neat and plausible explanation, and it’s this.
Prince William cannot stand Tony Blair, whom he blames for making political capital out of the death of his mother – “the People’s Princess”, as Blair’s spin doctors dubbed her within hours of her death.
The Prince has a long memory and a capacity for cold fury. We catch a glimpse of it in the section of Blair’s memoirs relating to the week after Diana’s death: “I had also spoken to William who was not only still grieving but angry. He knew, rationally, why the week between Diana’s death and the funeral had to be as it had been. But he felt acutely the conflict between public position and private emotion.”
That anger is likely to have reawakened by Blair’s decision to record such a private conversation in the book. It is not hard to imagine William saying “I’m not having that man at my wedding” – and getting his way: after all, in nearly 60 years, only one of the Queen’s prime ministers has twisted her arm to persuade her to do something that went against her instincts, and that was Tony Blair virtually demanding that she broadcast to the nation after the death of William’s mother. And can anyone doubt that the Royal family dislikes blabbermouth Cherie more than any other prime ministerial spouse?
My guess is that the Blairs were never on the wedding list, and that this also explains the absence of the Browns. Inviting Brown but not Blair would have brought the feud into the open: the Palace could not even have trotted out its implausible Knights of the Garter story. If I’m right, then one can’t help feeling a bit sorry for Gordon and Sarah, who are being punished for the crimes of their predecessors. But perhaps they saw it coming: one doesn’t have to spend long in royal company to know that forgiveness doesn’t come easily to the Windsors.
A “Who’s Who” of Arab dictators are invited to tomorrow’s British royal wedding, at the advice of the British Foreign office. But Tony Blair and Gordon Brown are not invited for the “crime” of overthrowing Saddam Hussein.
Hmmm. You can read more about some of those dictators at Tom's site and also here. The Syrian ambassador to London has earned the distinction of being the first person ever to have his invitation to a royal wedding withdrawn on the day before the wedding. More on that story here.
I am an Orthodox Jew - some would even call me 'ultra-Orthodox.' Born in Boston, I was a corporate and securities attorney in New York City for seven years before making aliya to Israel in 1991 (I don't look it but I really am that old :-). I have been happily married to the same woman for thirty-five years, and we have eight children (bli ayin hara) ranging in age from 13 to 33 years and nine grandchildren. Four of our children are married! Before I started blogging I was a heavy contributor on a number of email lists and ran an email list called the Matzav from 2000-2004. You can contact me at: IsraelMatzav at gmail dot com