Prince William Urged Tough Action on Andrew
Prince William has been portrayed as a key figure pushing for stronger action against his uncle Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, amid ongoing scrutiny of the Duke of York’s links to the late Jeffrey Epstein and renewed discussion of Andrew’s place within the Royal Family.
Express.co.uk reported that royal author Mr Russell Myers said the Prince of Wales made his views known that Andrew should have “no place within the monarchy” and should be “banished from the institution,” in remarks given on Newsweek’s The Royal Report podcast.
In the same interview, Mr Myers said Andrew’s continued proximity to the institution during the reign of Queen Elizabeth II and early in King Charles III’s reign would have been “a major problem,” and described William’s stance as both public and private.
The article also cites a palace source quoted in Mr Myers’s book William and Catherine: The Monarchy’s New Era, claiming that long before the Epstein scandal, William viewed his uncle as “a bit of an ignoramus” and was troubled by how Andrew behaved around staff, while maintaining relationships with his cousins Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie. A previous Britpop News report noted that Prince Andrew allegedly asked William for forgiveness as tensions around his status continued to play out publicly.
Andrew has denied wrongdoing, but his public role was curtailed after allegations by Ms Virginia Giuffre, who accused him of sexual assault, which he denied and later settled without admitting liability. The renewed focus on William’s reported behind-the-scenes influence underlines the extent to which senior royals are said to have viewed Andrew’s controversy as a reputational risk for the monarchy.





