This week, a forthcoming biography claimsPrince William has had enough of Prince Andrew's shadowand, privately at least, has used words you would not put on a Christmas card.
Here is what is being alleged. A new book by royal reporter Russell Myers portrays William as pushing to cut Andrew loose after the disastrous 2019Newsnightinterview. It also lands in the middle of a fresh legal storm, after police arrested Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor on suspicion of misconduct in public office, before releasing him 'under investigation.'
RadarOnline reports that Myers'William and Catherine: The Intimate Inside Storyquotes palace insiders describing William's view of his uncle as 'a stain on all the family.' It is a brutal little phrase, not least because it suggests something that spreads, something you cannot quite scrub out.
The alleged remark is presented as William's response to repeated revelations linked to Andrew's association with Jeffrey Epstein and the institutional panic that followed Andrew's 2019 BBCNewsnightappearance. In that interview, Andrew failed to show remorse about his Epstein ties and did not acknowledge the impact on Epstein's victims, a performance widely judged catastrophic.
RadarOnline says Myers writes that William believed the monarchy was 'engaged in a full-scale firefight' after the interview and feared lasting damage to the institution's credibility. The same report claims William urged both Queen Elizabeth II and his father, then Prince Charles, to remove Andrew from public life permanently.
Anyone waiting for a neat, on-the-record confirmation may be waiting some time. This is palace-source territory, and those sources are not known for attaching business cards to their quotes.
UK government considering legislation to remove Andrew from line of royal succession, BBC understandshttps://t.co/XW9BFuJFVR
The legal backdrop is not a footnote. NBC News reported that Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was arrested on Feb. 19 on suspicion of misconduct in public office and released after around 11 hours, 'under investigation,' meaning he has not been charged and has not been cleared.
CBS News also reported the arrest, citing Thames Valley Police, which said it had arrested 'a man in his sixties' as part of an investigation and that he was later 'released under investigation.'
For readers outside the UK, this matters because 'misconduct in public office' is a serious common-law offense, typically aimed at abuses of public trust by officeholders, and it is not the kind of allegation that disappears because a family wants it gone. Police have not publicly laid out the full case in court, so any assumptions about guilt should be treated with a grain of salt.
Source: International Business Times UK