“Today the king insisted that what now follows must be a ‘full, fair and proper’ investigation by the ‘appropriate’ authorities, but there was no mention of an ‘appropriate’ response from the Royal Family”
We can pretend he isn’t royal, and stumble over his new, long-winded ‘Mountbatten-Windsor’ nomenclature, but Andrew is the son of a monarch, born in Buckingham Palace 66 years ago, and he remains 8th in line to the throne.
So while reports confirm that in an unprecedented move, the former prince was arrested this morning on suspicion of misconduct in a public office, lets not fool ourselves that Andrew is no longer royal. It was precisely because of his privileged position the former Prince was ‘anointed’ trade envoy in the first place – a sop to the late Queen from the Blair Administration in 2001 after a difficult royal decade.
The Windsor family’s popularity tanked in the 1990s (having polled at over 80% support during the ‘80s) in the wake of infidelity scandals, three royal divorces and Diana’s tragic death. But those dark days don’t begin to compare with the current Epstein quagmire into which the former prince has dragged his family.
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Very small fry in comparison with today’s grotesque public unravelling of a former Prince. For far too long Andrew has been able to weaponise his royal privilege to push back against his accuser and to protect himself from legal scrutiny. Today he remains in police custody on potential charges of misconduct in a public office, but so many questions remain unanswered.
We still don’t know where the money came from that paid off Virginia Giuffre in 2022, when she accused Andrew of sexual assault under New York’s Child Victim’s Act, or how much the royal family knew about Andrew’s activities with Epstein more broadly. The latter’s female accusers have done so much to move this story forward and hold powerful men to account, surely it is time that our royal family also stepped up to the plate?
Today the king insisted that what now follows must be a ‘full, fair and proper’ investigation by the ‘appropriate’ authorities, but there was no mention of an ‘appropriate’ response from the Royal Family.
The late Queen protected her son Andrew, the institution of monarchy batted away questions concerning the Duke of York’s alleged misconduct since 2011 and Buckingham Palace was the address from which Andrew platformed his lies on the BBC in 2019.
Beyond what happens to their ‘ex-royal’ brother, surely the least the Royal Family can do is apologise for consistently turning a blind eye to former Duke of York’s extensive abuse of power.

