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The House Opinion Article | There is a sensible way to restore Parliament

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There is a sensible way to restore Parliament
There is a sensible way to restore Parliament

(Alamy)


4 min read

There are lessons abroad and in history about how to get this right.

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When William Blathwayt, the irascible Whig politician who founded the War Office, was rebuilding his Gloucestershire country seat in the 1690s, he became so exasperated with the stream of financial demands from his builders that he finally erupted, “these people want stirring up soundly and not to be overfed with money!”

This volatile prescription could also be applied to the faceless squadron of consultants who have concocted, at its worst, a £39bn, 61-year timescale for the restoration of the Palace of Westminster.

Policy Exchange has long campaigned for beauty to once again become a defining feature in our built environment, and if there is any single British building that symbolises how an enlightened state can directly procure it on a gargantuan scale, it is the Houses of Parliament.

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And yet, not even an icon this venerable can justify the profligate excess currently associated with its refurbishment. Even the best-case scenario of £15.6bn over 24 years is fiscally, electorally and ethically unconscionable. So what is the solution? I humbly propose five.

First, the current project must be scrapped and replaced with one that maintains a practical, economic and forensic focus on delivering the three ‘R’s (Repairing, Rewiring and Restoring) to prevent the three ‘F’s (Flooding, Fire and Falling). Anything further to this core ambition of making the building fabric safe and stable should be shelved.

This means no to a net zero revamp, no to full wheelchair accessibility (offices, amenities and public areas will do), no to carving sacrilegious ramps into Westminster Hall and no to turning a Victorian building into a modern one. Were the Blobular bureaucrats handling the current project let loose on the Leaning Tower of Pisa, they would invariably attempt to straighten it.

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And no to the extreme architectural hubris evident in current visualisations. It beggars belief that this needs to be said, but every design intervention must be sympathetic to the aesthetic principles of a Gothic palace and not a Qatari golf resort.

Secondly, to help finance the project, authorities should consider opening the top of the Elizabeth Tower to paying tourists. There would inevitably be logistical challenges, but the French state earns around £87m annually from Eiffel Tower visitors, and similar revenues from iconic Big Ben would greatly help offset costs.

Thirdly, demolish Westminster’s QEII Conference Centre – an incongruous carcass of 1970s ASBO-Brutalism – and replace it with a contextually sympathetic building that can accommodate both decanted Commons and Lords chambers before being converted back into a conference centre after Parliament’s restoration.

Fourthly, learn from the ongoing restoration of similar parliamentary buildings inspired by Westminster: Canada’s. Comparisons of this nature are difficult, but despite being of a similar size, style and age to our own, Ottawa’s Parliament Hill is currently being refurbished for just £2.7bn. We should learn how.

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And finally, we should also learn from an even closer precedent: Notre Dame de Paris. The fire that ravaged it in 2019 offered a grim portent to a crumbling Westminster, but its heroic five-year reconstruction has arguably been the defining and most successful restoration project of our age.

Though a smaller (£650m) and arguably less complex undertaking, political leadership was central to its success. This came in the form of the military general requisitioned to lead the project and plough through the onerous trenches of French bureaucracy. And also in the very personal leadership of President Macron himself, who bravely staked his political credibility on the project’s successful completion.

Both strategies are the minimum leadership template we must employ here. A British prime minister needs to assume Westminster’s restoration as his or her personal mantle and pledge, with senior expert external support, to complete at least the bulk of the post-decant works within the life of a Parliament.

After the devastating 1992 fire at Windsor Castle, government agencies were excluded from its reconstruction in favour of private contractors, and the late Duke of Edinburgh took personal charge of the project. The result? The restored castle reopened in 1997, six months ahead of schedule and costing just over half its expected £60m budget.

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A streamlined brief, private sector efficiency and strong political leadership are key to ensuring that Westminster can reap Windsor’s rewards.

 

Ike Ijeh is Head of Housing, Architecture & Urban Space at Policy Exchange

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Ruth Langsford Admits Feeling ‘Broken’ After Eamonn Holmes Split

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Ruth Langsford Admits Feeling 'Broken' After Eamonn Holmes Split

Ruth Langsford has reflected on her split from ex-husband Eamonn Holmes in a candid new interview.

The two TV personalities had been together for 27 years, and married for 14, when a spokesperson announced in 2024 that the “marriage is over” and the pair were “in the process of divorcing”.

In the years since, Ruth has remained mostly tight-lipped about the break-up, but has spoken about it more candidly to the Daily Mail’s Weekend magazine.

Ruth began by saying that she and Eamonn had a “very happy marriage”, continuing: “Of course you question yourself, ‘did I miss something, was I not aware, was I too busy?’. But there’s no point playing the blame game.”

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The Loose Women anchor admitted: “I just didn’t think I’d find myself here, and I wasn’t strong at the start. I was broken. Broken heart. Broken dreams.

“We all have an image of how we think our life and future is going to be. This wasn’t mine. I was devastated. We had gone from being a couple, traversing the usual ups and downs of a marriage, to an abrupt end. It was a huge shock.”

In the end, Ruth said she had to “give myself a good talking to” in order to stop herself “catastrophising”.

She recalled: “I was literally asking, ‘What’s going to become of me?’, like some sad, lonely woman in a Jane Austen novel.

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“But then age and experience told me, ‘Ruth, you’re not going to die from this. I mean you are going to die, one day, but you’re not going to die from divorce’.”

Ruth initially took two months off her role on Loose Women in the wake of her divorce announcement, making only fleeting references to the split on the panel show in the period that followed.

Eamonn – who has since been linked with relationship counselor Katie Alexandertold viewers during his GB News show the day after the announcement was made: “I would like to thank you for your support for Ruth and I over the last few days as to the news of our separation.

“Your support for both of us is very much appreciated.”

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Ruth and Eamonn share one son, Jack, who was born in 2002. Eamonn also has three grown-up children from his previous marriage to his first wife.

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Toby Berry: The fate written in Reform’s name

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Toby Berry: The fate written in Reform’s name

Toby Berry is a Young Conservative and student in South London. 

There is a curious phenomenon which many of us are bound to have seen at some point: the idea that a name can shape destiny. We are most familiar with this applied to individuals, a sailor called Mr Shipman, a prelate called Cardinal Sin, but it is worth wondering if it can be considered more broadly.

The three traditionally largest parties in Britain, the Liberals (or as they have been for some years, the Liberal Democrats), the Conservatives, and Labour, have names describing their worldview; they derive their names from their respective ideologies. Generally, to join the Liberals is to be a liberal, to join Labour is to be a union-style socialist, and to join the Conservatives is to be of a conservative disposition.

Each may lose its way, adopt newer, broader ideological taglines – liberal conservatism, the New Left, or ‘Orange Book’ liberalism – but, fundamentally, each holds to its name. In return, its name gives them a deep history to appeal to, to demonstrate to the public the approximate way they will govern, even without considering specific policy.

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Other parties define themselves by other terms, more by what they oppose or seek than by what ideological ideation they hold. Their names still give a very clear indication of their priorities, and the phenomenon is observable even beyond overtly single-issue parties like the Abolish the Welsh Assembly Party: the Scottish National Party is recognisably the party of Scottish regionalism, the Greens are fundamentally environmentalists, UKIP was the party of Euroscepticism.

One party, a fixture of modern British politics, has been left unmentioned thus far. What does this mean for Reform UK?

Its name and its message are commensurate with each other. It diagnoses Britain as having a broken political system – Robert Jenrick justified his defection by criticising Kemi Badenoch for not sufficiently recognising this idea. It seeks to reform the British political system in its own image. Reform, fundamentally, seeks to reform that which it considers broken.

What Reform believes on this level is clear, but what does this mean for their future?

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If Reform wins, they will try to enact sweeping reforms. There are two broad possibilities: they will either succeed both in implementation and outcome, or they will fail to work, or indeed to implement them at all.

Let us work backwards and consider first the possibility of failure. The verdict of the public here would be stinging, and probably fatal. Reform would have won a desperate electorate, people viewing the party as their last hope. A party which is called Reform and which fails to reform is utterly redundant. Voters do not gift infinite patience to a movement defining itself in one way and carrying itself in another; the current Labour government, and the Conservative government before it, tell us that much.

If Reform succeeds, and our institutions are restored, borders secured, and bureaucracy slimmed, what is there to justify their continued existence? If Britain is no longer broken, what else is there to reform?

One possibility is an absurdity, inventing new causes to reform in the model of perpetual revolution. Another, conserving what they would have built, is sustainable. In this hypothetical, when Britain is fixed, it must be defended. Restored institutions must be protected from any future manifestations of Blair-era constitutional vandalism, norms embedded, and the new political settlement insulated.

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This is conservatism.

Reform have already been called recycled Tories by some, given that now four of seven of their MPs sat as Conservatives, with potentially more to come. At the point at which they cease to reform, they really do become the Conservative Party. The point at which Reform defines itself not around change, but inheritance and the defence of the true, the good, and the beautiful, is the point at which it defines itself with the instincts of conservatism.

They could retain their name, or they could come out into the open as a Conservative Party, or they could synchronise and become one with whatever remains of the party of Disraeli, Churchill, and Thatcher. In any case, would Britain not have reverted to its natural state?

This says nothing to diminish the responsibility of the Conservative Party to fight for its survival. Its future must be secured on its own terms, not conceded by default. As I was recently reminded by a very experienced hand in politics, while the relationship of the Conservatives with Labour or the Liberals is business, our standing with Reform is existential. They seek to destroy the party, to annihilate it. Yet, in doing so, they may be moving closer to that which they want to end; a party which succeeds in reforming Britain will, sooner or later, face the task of conserving what it has built. Its future may look rather more like its past than it currently imagines.

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Restore: Rupert Lowe’s vanity project?

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Restore: Rupert Lowe’s vanity project?

The post Restore: Rupert Lowe’s vanity project? appeared first on spiked.

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Andrew, Epstein and our feckless elites

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Andrew, Epstein and our feckless elites

The post Andrew, Epstein and our feckless elites appeared first on spiked.

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UK Lawyers for Israel’s weaponisation of laws exposed

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UK Lawyers for Israel’s weaponisation of laws exposed

On 25 February, the European Legal Support Center (ELSC) is launching a publicly searchable database.

Otherwise known as ‘Britain’s Index of Repression,’ it catalogues instances where UK institutions and craven bodies have used the law. More specifically, it shows how Israel-adjacent groups are using legal means to stifle Palestine solidarity.

Unsurprisingly, a quick search for UK Lawyers for Israel brings back 128 results. It seems that what the Canary has known all along is becoming public knowledge.

The nefarious lobbyists at UK Lawyers for Israel have and remain to be actively involved in repressing British civil liberties. Only, they’re batting for the wrong team — by which we mean a hostile, foreign state.

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In their own words, plucked from their website, the UK Lawyers for Israel, describes it’s remit as follows:

We use the law to counter attempts to undermine, attack and delegitimise Israel, Israeli organisations, Israelis, and supporters of Israel.

‘Unregulated law firm’

ELSC have long advocated for those facing persecution for expressing solidarity with Palestinians, arguing that legal interventions by Israel-aligned lobby groups have led to:

institutional action against Palestine solidarity in schools, workplaces, universities and beyond.

The database is a work in progress and it is possible that there have been other depraved interventions that aren’t yet in the database. The items that are searchable, as the ELSC points out, is just what they are able to verify at present — suggesting that pro-Israel interventions are possible much higher.

Their post in full reads:

This is why ELSC, alongside the Public Interest Law Centre, filed a formal complaint with the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) against the Director of UK Lawyers for Israel.

Our complaint sets out serious breaches of professional standards, including the use of Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participation (SLAPPs) designed to intimidate and silence Palestine Solidarity.

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We further call on the SRA to investigate whether UK Lawyers for Israel is operating as an unregulated law firm and to bring it under formal regulatory oversight.

Lawfare must not be used to silence Palestine solidarity.

Stating that the new index represents the legal centre’s ‘push back’ on repression on behalf of a genocidal state, they added that:

Anti-Palestinian repression in Britain is not accidental. It is structural and systemic.

Our new report shows how repression works to depoliticise solidarity, forcing the movement onto the defensive, draining resources, and fracturing collective power.

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The goal is bigger still: to erase Palestinian history and struggle from public consciousness.

Referring to the report being released on the 25th, they finished:

We will expose the architecture of repression, from universities to workplaces, cultural institutions to public space.

We are making this resource public so the movement can understand it, challenge it, and make it undeniable.

The ELSC will livestream the launch and invites those who want a first look to register their interest on their website.

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Repression at Kings College London

The Canary wrote earlier this month about a mass walkout at Kings College London (KCL), protesting Usama Ghanem’s indefinite suspension. Ghanem is an Egyptian student at KCL who has had his student visa revoked. To make matters worse, he now faces deportation to Egypt, putting his life at risk.

We wrote:

Organisers say Usama’s case is part of a broader crackdown targeting pro-Palestine staff and students, including disciplinary action and intimidation. At KCL, more than twenty students – primarily students of colour – have faced disciplinary procedures linked to Palestine activism. However, far-right and Zionist groups have repeatedly targeted demonstrators on campus.

A KCL staff member talked about the broader context of Usama’s suspension. They noted that the college:

“escalated disciplinary action against pro-Palestine students, closed down hard-won fora on divestment and the reconstruction of Gaza’s education system, rejected all divestment demands, and unilaterally introduced new protest restrictions.

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At the same time, it has failed to challenge Zionist and fascist groups like Stop the Hate and Betar, allowing them to intimidate and assault staff and students with impunity.”

Eyes open

British society is no longer blind to the fact that our freedom of speech faces institutional attack. Those same institutions answer to Keir Starmer who, as we’ve reported before, has chosen Israel at every turn.

Even the far-right have long expresses concerns that free speech is being curtailed. But no to call out blatant attacks on universal civil liberty and the unspoken institutional veto against anyone opposing the murder of innocent men, women and children in Gaza.

As British citizens, we need to ask ourselves ‘why are some people more outraged about limits on hateful speech than about our ability to object to mass murder’?

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Once the ELSC releases its Index of Repression, those in power are no longer able to deny this reality. The layers of secrecy keeping people misinformed and beguiled by political trickery have been stripped back.

Feature image via Barold/the Canary

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Calls To Remove Andrew From Line Of Succession Grow After Arrest

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Calls To Remove Andrew From Line Of Succession Grow After Arrest

Calls for Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor to be removed from the line of succession are growing following the former prince’s arrest.

The former Duke of York was held in custody for 11 hours on Thursday, on his 66th birthday, before being released under investigation.

Andrew has always denied any allegations of wrongdoing.

He was detained on suspicion of misconduct in public office while his homes in were searched by police.

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It’s understood that the search in his Norfolk home on the Sandringham estate has concluded while officers continued to look through his Royal Lodge home in Windsor, Berkshire, on Friday.

The shocking turn of events comes after three million documents related to the dead paedophile Jeffrey Epstein were released by the US Department of Justice.

Several UK forces have since started to look into various claims, including the possibility that Andrew sent confidential information to Epstein in his capacity as Britain’s trade envoy.

The documents suggest the former prince may have forwarded government reports from his visits to Vietnam, Singapore and China to the disgraced financier.

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Thames Valley Police also said in February that it was assessing a separate allegation that a second woman was sent to the UK by Epstein for a sexual encounter with Andrew in 2010.

The woman, who is not British, was in her 20s at the time.

Yesterday’s arrest was not in relation to allegations of any sexual offences.

Andrew stepped down from his royal duties in 2019 after a car crash Newsnight interview about his friendship with Epstein.

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When further allegations about their association emerged in October, King Charles stripped Andrew of his titles – including his status as prince.

However, Andrew remains eighth in line to the throne, behind Prince William and his children, and Prince Harry and his children.

Legislation via an act of parliament would be needed to remove him from the line of succession, and MPs would have to debate the topic.

These latest claims, alongside the arrest, have triggered calls for more extreme action.

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A YouGov poll has found 82% of the public think Andrew should be removed, while 6% disagreed and 12% said they were not sure.

Lib Dem leader Ed Davey said the monarchy must work to make sure Andrew can “never become king”.

He said: “The most important thing right now is that the police be allowed to get on with their job, acting without fear or favour.

“But clearly this is an issue that parliament is going to have to consider when the time is right, naturally the Monarchy will want to make sure he can never become King.”

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Meanwhile the Green Party leader Zack Polanski has called for a full statutory inquiry.

“I think its pretty awful, I think there are lots of questions to be asked,” he said. “We obviously need to wait for the legal process to make its way, but I would say we really need a full statutory inquiry.”

He argued that “when necessary” people should be “removed” from their positions – adding that he did not believe Britain should have a monarchy.

Meanwhile, shortly before Andrew’s arrest, prime minister Keir Starmer told BBC Breakfast that “nobody is above the law” when asked about the allegations against the former prince.

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The King already appeared to distance the royal family from his disgraced brother on Thursday in a statement.

He wrote: “I have learned with the deepest concern the news about Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and suspicion of misconduct in public office.

“What now follows is the full, fair and proper process by which this issue is investigated in the appropriate manner and by the appropriate authorities. In this, as I have said before, they have our full and wholehearted support and co-operation.

“Let me state clearly: the law must take its course.

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“As this process continues, it would not be right for me to comment further on this matter. Meanwhile, my family and I will continue in our duty and service to you all.”

In a statement on Thursday evening, the police said: “Thames Valley Police is able to provide an update in relation to an investigation into the offence of misconduct in public office.

“On Thursday we arrested a man in his sixties from Norfolk on suspicion of misconduct in public office.

“The arrested man has now been released under investigation.

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“We can also confirm that our searches in Norfolk have now concluded.”

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‘Would Keir Starmer Be Happy For A Nude Image Of Him To Be Live For 48 Hours?’

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'Would Keir Starmer Be Happy For A Nude Image Of Him To Be Live For 48 Hours?'

For decades, victims have been suffering the consequences of degrading behaviour.

Revenge porn, deep fakes and more recently, images produced by X’s AI bot Grok, have put people onto a public stage in an incredibly vulnerable way that they did not ask for.

The rise in misogyny, in a world where many boys today think that feminism has gone far enough, coupled with developments in AI that enable people to remove a person’s clothes or to generate tailored porn, is terrifying.

It’s clear that we need new strict guardrails in place, which is what the government is attempting to do.

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Keir Starmer announced this week that tech companies must remove “revenge porn” and deepfake nudes within a 48-hour window or their whole platform could be blocked and they could be fined millions.

This is welcome news. For years, victims have pleaded for these images and videos to come down, begging the police, the website owners and anyone who will listen to remove content that they did not consent to sharing, and then fighting for justice against their perpetrators.

These pleas have often fallen on deaf ears with victims feeling totally powerless against the internet, which never forgets you.

“This is not a ‘job done’ solution; we need to go further”

Action, not words, is what we need to see here. The huge positive here is that the government is shifting the shame by putting pressure on tech giants and companies to act and to protect victims over profits.

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It is good to see that this is finally being taken seriously and that it is not just targeting social media sites, but a range of tech platforms.

But the most important thing is that they follow up with something robust enough to make change happen at a systems level.

It’s hard to know if the regulator Ofcom has the level of resources to manage the massive rise in generated content and all the new platforms and apps appearing.

They have a mammoth task ahead of them to be able to capture and control every single piece of content that lands. This is not a ‘job done’ solution; we need to go further and stop this content from being created and shared at all.

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48 hours makes a good headline – but it is a huge amount of time for victims to suffer. It takes just seconds to screenshot and share an image.

How long would Keir Starmer want a compromising video or nude photo of himself online? I suspect 48 seconds would be too long.

Tech companies have put profit before harm since their inception, and it’s been the survivors and campaigners who’ve been pushing for years for accountability. In many ways, it’s about time we got proactive.

But what’s crucial is that we don’t accept this as a radical solution.

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We should see this as an initial stepping stone, because I think we can all agree that victims deserve more than this.

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Caption Contest (Train Crash Edition)

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Caption Contest (Train Crash Edition)

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royal family should face tough questions

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royal family should face tough questions

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s arrest following the revelations in the Epstein files is invariably a gigantic embarrassment for the parasitic royal family. And, calls are growing for answers over the royal family’s support of Andrew over the years.

Historian Tessa Dunlop slammed the Royal Family’s choice to refrain from offering any apology to the British public in the Mirror. Dunlop pointed out that the privileged family could have paid attention to the disgraced prince’s apparent abuse of power.

Confronting Andrew’s ‘weaponised‘ use of his Royal privilege to shut down the allegations towards him, she exposed the lack of humility and accountability being shown by his silver-spoon family.

A point which was similarly made on Question Time to Fiona Bruce. No surprises, Bruce attempted to deflect the point:

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Epstein files show we must ‘hold powerful men to account’

In an opinion piece for the Mirror, Dunlop welcomed the ‘unprecedented move’ to arrest the former prince. She reminded us once again of the sex-pest’s relationship with paedophile Jeffrey Epstein and the victims who will be paying close attention. However, highlighting the shameful response by the Royal’s to continually use their privilege to protect the former prince, she underscored the message sent to victims everywhere that elites are not held to the same legal standards as everybody else.

She wrote:

So while reports confirm that in an unprecedented move, the former prince was arrested this morning on suspicion of misconduct in a public office, let’s 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.

Challenging the royals to show the same courage as the victims of powerful men, Dunlop added:

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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?

She concluded:

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.

Sympathy for powerful men

Narinder Kaur’s post on X highlights that there is no shortage of examples of influential figures expressing sympathy for powerful men facing allegations. They often focus more on the personal discomfort or “tragedy” of the accused than on the seriousness of the claims.

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What many of these reactions tend to share is a striking disregard for victims. There has been a consistent failure, whether deliberate or not, to centre the experiences and suffering of those who may have been harmed through this shady web of the elite.

Psychotherapist Lucy Beresford argued on Sky News that seeing a powerful man face the full force of the law – just like any ordinary citizen – can have a profoundly positive impact on victims everywhere. It reinforces the idea that justice applies equally, regardless of status or privilege:

Empathy for harm caused, not for the ‘fall from grace’

Dunlop’s intervention strengthens the point that victims will once again suffer as a result of the royal family’s continued avoidance tactics. In turn, they refuse to fully address the allegations against Andrew, and those against his close pal, convicted paedophile Epstein. As a result, victims are left feeling diminished and abandoned by justice.

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We wrote yesterday:

Mountbatten-Windsor is currently in police custody amid searches of multiple properties as part of the criminal inquiry. The Epstein files have raised serious concerns about the scale of this sinister web of elitist men. This has prompted widespread demands for full transparency and accountability for sexual abuse against women and girls.

However, this pattern underscores how far more precedence is given to economic interests and institutional power over justice for victims and accountability for abusive men.

Undoubtedly, the Royal Family feel discomfort around this issue. But that discomfort pales in comparison to the serious trauma experienced by victims of sexual abuse. Shamefully, the monarchy deepens that trauma by showing palpable disinterest in the harm powerful men cause.

Another reminder that they will never be on our side.

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For more on the Epstein Files, please read:

Featured image via the Canary

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