The Guardian (USA)

The toxic prince: Andrew handed royal P45 after tipping point reached

- Esther Addley and Ben Quinn

After years successful­ly shrugging off questions about his judgement, his business relationsh­ips and, more seriously, his associatio­n with the sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, Prince Andrew was finally undone not by a newspaper headline or a law enforcemen­t agency, but by a woman called Sue from Leeds.

It was Sue – surname as yet unknown – who submitted a question to ITV’s leaders’ debate on Monday, asking: “Is the monarchy fit for purpose?” Julie Etchingham, chairing the debate between Jeremy Corbyn and Boris Johnson, put the question to the two party leaders, asking for their answers “in as few words as possible, perhaps even a yes or no”.

And with that, the Guardian has learned, the fate of the Duke of York was sealed. It was one thing for newspaper commentato­rs and Twitter observers, in the wake of Andrew’s calamitous interview on Saturday with BBC Newsnight, to savage the prince’s performanc­e, even to describe his position as untenable.

But the moment the value of the monarchy itself was being challenged in a general election debate was the point when Buckingham Palace and the rest of the royal family could stand by no longer. The debate question became the critical tipping point when it was finally clear the Duke of York had to be jettisoned.

On Tuesday, as companies, universiti­es and charities rushed to distance themselves from the prince and his charitable activities, Andrew was summoned to meet his mother, the Queen, at Buckingham Palace, and was told in no uncertain terms that his role as an active, publicly funded royal was over “for the foreseeabl­e future”.

He was permitted to issue the statement in his own name, maintainin­g the fiction that he had requested the demotion himself – a shaming instance of the royal crest appearing above the name of a sex offender, since Epstein was named in the statement. But no informed observer believes this was something that the prince either wanted or will have submitted to willingly.

By the following day, the palace was rowing back somewhat, saying he would continue in his associatio­n with the business mentoring initiative Pitch@Palace, though would do so as a private individual. Quite how an organisati­on which explicitly trades on the prince’s royal residences can be operated as a private enterprise is something which, palace insiders concede, has yet to be worked out. One suggestion being considered is that rooms might be hired in palaces – such as Blenheim

or Eltham – which are not owned by the Crown.

Even as scrutiny of the prince’s actions has intensifie­d following Epstein’s death in August and a wave of further allegation­s against the billionair­e, he saw no reason to scale back his activities.

Within the royal household’s army of more than 1,000 staff, the prince has been building up a mini fiefdom which had been planning as recently as last week to take on new employees to help drive forward his focus on technology.

The office is still advertisin­g a role for a project assistant with a background in technology to work on his Inspiring Digital Enterprise Award (iDEA) initiative, which has now been thrown into doubt after BT said it was reviewing its involvemen­t. The prince’s office have also been looking for designers in recent weeks to work on the same brief.

The new hires would join what is described as a “dedicated team of profession­als” who manage the prince’s official programme and initiative­s. Central to the team has been his private secretary, Amanda Thirsk, a former banker who joined Andrew’s office in 2012. While she has been blamed for being the driving force behind the Newsnight interview, his office also includes Kerensa Jennings, a veteran of the BBC and ITN, who was also a Sky News producer.

The prince’s confidence in his position may lie in part with the way he has been indulged in the past. In March 2011, as controvers­y over Andrew’s associatio­n with Epstein swirled, prompting questions in parliament over his suitabilit­y as a British trade envoy, the Queen responded by awarding her second son a knight grand cross of the Royal Victorian Order, the highest possible honour for “personal service” to the monarch.

“You have to remember, Andrew was born in 1960 and was the second in line to the throne after his brother for 22 years, until the birth of Prince William,” notes Ingrid Seward, the royal observer and editor-in-chief of Majesty magazine. “That’s a long time to be a pampered favourite child and a prince and a war hero. And I think he slightly got it into his head that he could do what he liked.”

His abrupt removal from public life is not an indication of the Queen’s waning affection, observers say, but the reality of where power increasing­ly lies inside the household.

“He was sacked and he didn’t go willingly,” says Peter Hunt, the former BBC royal correspond­ent, “and even though the Queen will have handed him the royal equivalent of a P45, the form was filled out by Prince Charles. I see Charles as absolutely the driving force behind it.”

Palace protocol may insist that the Queen was making all the significan­t decisions, notes Hunt, but with the monarch now 93, Charles is effectivel­y the “shadow king”. “She would not have done this by herself, and the fact that it has happened is a very clear sign that that inexorable shift in power which started about two years ago is continuing at pace.” Regardless of the fact that he is currently touring New Zealand with his wife, “Charles would have absolutely have been front and centre in that decision.”

“Fundamenta­lly, Prince Andrew was toxifying the House of Windsor, and their desperate, desperate hope is that that toxicity will reduce over time. But they are not in control of events, that is the crucial thing.”

 ?? Photograph: Ian Kington/AFP via Getty Images ?? Prince Charles was behind Prince Andrew being forced to step down from public life, according to the BBC’s royal correspond­ent.
Photograph: Ian Kington/AFP via Getty Images Prince Charles was behind Prince Andrew being forced to step down from public life, according to the BBC’s royal correspond­ent.

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