The Prince of Wales advised the Queen that she must effectively sack Prince Andrew to safeguard the long-term future of the monarchy, the Evening Standard has learned.
Prince Charles moved decisively to end his brother’s career in public life because of the damage being caused by the Duke of York’s “ill-judged” friendship with paedophile billionaire Jeffrey Epstein.
This is not about personalities, this is about protecting the institution of the monarchy itself, a senior figure said.
Officially, Andrew, 59, made the decision to step down from royal duties for the foreseeable future after discussion with senior royals.
But sources said he was given no choice as Charles on tour in New Zealand and the Queen felt swift action was needed.
After informing the wider royal family, Buckingham Palace put out a statement shortly before 6pm on Andrew’s behalf, saying: I have asked Her Majesty if I may step back from public duties for the foreseeable future, and she has given her permission.
The continuing fallout from the royal crisis came as:
- The duke faced being stripped of the £249,000 salary that he receives from the Queen.
- A lawyer representing some of Epstein’s alleged victims threatened to subpoena Andrew to force him to give evidence under oath.
- It emerged the duke met Epstein’s ex-girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell in London two weeks after US prosecutors announced they wanted to reopen their investigation into the tycoon.
The final straw for the Queen and Charles came when Andrew’s BBC Newsnight interview triggered a media frenzy and led to businesses and charities abandoning him.
Both were also alarmed that the royal family was being dragged into the election debate.