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So I've been reading Janice Hadlow's excellent A Royal Experiment, a biography on the marriages of the Hanoverian Royal line,just finished the chapter on George III's 1788-89 madness and its got me thinking; what if, instead of recovering, George III went permanently mad in 1789? How would Britain deal with thirty-two years of a regency (or less if George III's physical health deteriorates) under the spoiled, decadent arch-dandy that was the Prince Regent? Assuming that the Regency Act 1789 has the same provisions as the Regency Act 1811 (with sunset clauses on the limitations of the Regent's power),
would the Whigs be able to properly respond to the French Revolution and the accompanying Revolutionary wars? Would the party still dissolve over the French Revolution, with a split between the Radical Whigs under Charles James Fox and the Conservatives under Edmund Burke and the Grandees? If so which would form the government, or would the Prince Regent turn to the Tories?

More personally for the Royal family, what about the possibility of marriages for George III's daughters? OTL George IV was very sympathetic to his sisters, so could we see them at last allowed to marry? Would the Regent himself still marry Caroline of Brunswick, someone else or perhaps simply remain single if he doesn't need the income increase from a marriage? Basically I want to discuss the long-term repercussions of a decades long Regency on Britain and the World.
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