Prince William “wants the stables cleaned” regarding his controversial uncle, the former Prince Andrew, a royal biographer alleges via Page Six.
Andrew Lownie, who wrote “Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York,” recently claimed that the former royal is concerned about his precarious position in the family.
“He’s worried about what’s going to happen,” Lownie told Page Six in a recent exclusive interview. “He’s going to be no longer protected. William is going to deal with him.”
Lownie said that the Prince of Wales “wants to deal” with his errant uncle before cancer-stricken King Charles dies.
“He wants the stables cleaned … the window dressing is that Andrew will leave by the spring, and he’s a good boy, and he’s done what he’s been told,” he details.
However, Lownie noted that Andrew is rarely “a good boy” and predicts that he will “go kicking and screaming,” demanding many guarantees, including a “pretty big house, extensive staff, a gardener, a driver, a housekeeper [and] a cook.”
Earlier this year, the Queen’s second son was stripped of his “prince” title and was forced to moved out of his longtime residence, Royal Lodge home, amid his ties to the late convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.
He is now known as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor. His ex-wife, Sarah Ferguson, also lost her title as the Duchess of York.
Virginia Guiffre, an Epstein s*x trafficking victim, long claimed that she had been forced to sleep with Andrew when she was just 17. Andrew, who denied the accusation, paid Guiffre, who took her own life in April at age 41, a multi-million dollar settlement in 2022.
A newly released 2021 email from the Epstein files disclosed that Andrew allegedly asked his pal, Epstein accomplice Ghislaine Maxwell, if she had “found me some new inappropriate friends.”
Maxwell, is currently serving 20 years for sex trafficking, although she was inexplicably moved to a cushier prison.
Lownie, who is working on the paperback edition of his book, promises there will be lots of new juicy material because so many people have come forward.
“I would say almost every day, two or three people come to me with stories of encounters with [Andrew],” Lownie explained. “Former schoolmates, former Navy colleagues, former members of staff, former diplomats who weren’t prepared to talk to me.
“I’ve had some people from the intelligence agencies who were frustrated, who were reporting things that were just being ignored.”





