Friday, 31 October 2025

The Windsor Precedent: How a Prince's Fall Could Foreshadow a King's.

 

King Charles III

The stripping of Prince Andrew’s military affiliations and royal patronages was presented as a necessary act of damage control. In the wake of his disastrous BBC Newsnight interview and the subsequent civil sexual assault case, the institution of the monarchy moved to sever its formal ties with the Duke of York. The unspoken message was clear: this level of controversy, this profound association with criminality and moral decay, is incompatible with the representation of the Crown.


Andrew Windsor

But in creating this new, hardline standard, the House of Windsor may have unwittingly set a trap for itself. The precedent now established is not merely about legal guilt or civil liability; it is about the corrosive effect of association. And if that is the new benchmark, then the gaze of public scrutiny cannot stop at the disgraced prince. It must, inevitably, travel up the family tree and settle upon the King himself.


The case against Andrew Windsor is stark. His friendship with the convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, maintained even after Epstein’s initial conviction, demonstrated a catastrophic lapse in judgment. His inability to express credible remorse or victim empathy sealed his fate in the court of public opinion. The monarchy, in stripping him of his titles, acted as if the problem was contained to one "bad apple."


This is a comforting fiction, but the roots of the issue appear to run much deeper, entwining themselves around the very foundations of the institution. King Charles III, throughout his life, has himself maintained friendships with individuals whose crimes now cast long, dark shadows.


The most prominent of these is the late Jimmy Savile. The now-infamous photograph of a young Charles laughing with Savile at a charity event is a chilling artefact of a different era. But the relationship was more than a photo opportunity. Savile was a trusted confidant, a regular guest at Charles’s royal residences, and even consulted on the running of the Prince’s Trust. The Duke of York’s defence often centres on his being a poor judge of character, yet here is the now-King, having embraced one of the most prolific sexual predators in British history as an advisor and friend.


Jimmy Savile and Charles Windsor

The connections do not end there. Another figure is Peter Ball, a former Bishop of Lewes and Gloucester. Ball was a close friend of Charles for over two decades, a man he described as a "constant source of strength." During this time, Ball was systematically abusing young men aspiring to the priesthood. The Prince of Wales interceded on Ball’s behalf after initial allegations surfaced, writing to him and offering support. Ball was eventually convicted in 2015 for misconduct in public office and indecent assaults, with the court hearing he had used his status to "mesmerise" his victims. Charles’s loyalty to Ball, even in the face of serious allegations, mirrors the very pattern of poor judgment for which his brother was condemned.


Peter Ball and Charles Windsor

This pattern was further cemented when the then-Prince of Wales refused a formal request from the Independent Inquiry into Child Sexual Abuse (IICSA) to give a statement under oath about his relationship with Peter Ball. Instead of offering a full and transparent account to assist the public investigation, he provided a short written witness statement that was described by the inquiry as lacking "full context." This act of non-cooperation stands in stark contrast to the demand for accountability levied against his brother. While Andrew was punished for his associations, Charles actively withheld his full cooperation from a statutory inquiry established to understand how institutions like the Church had failed victims of abuse.



This pattern forces a series of deeply uncomfortable questions. If association with a convicted paedophile is grounds for being stripped of royal status, what is the consequence of a lifelong pattern of such associations? If Andrew’s friendship with Epstein warranted his removal from public life, what does Charles’s sustained and supportive relationship with both Savile and Ball signify?


The questions become even more disturbing when one considers the environment in which the King was raised. His great-uncle and mentor, Lord Louis Mountbatten, has been the subject of persistent and credible allegations of paedophilia for decades. Historians and biographers, including Andrew Lownie in his book "The Mountbattens," have documented the rumours and the private concerns of contemporaries about Mountbatten’s attraction to adolescent boys.



This leads to the most harrowing question of all: if Mountbatten was a predatory paedophile, and he was one of the most influential figures in the young Charles’s life, is it not only reasonable, but essential, to ask if the young Prince of Wales was a victim of abuse? We do not know, and it is a question that should be posed with the utmost gravity and respect for any potential victim. But the precedent set by the Andrew Windsor case is that silence and association are no longer tenable. The institution, having demanded accountability from one member, must now be prepared for the same rigorous standard to be applied to its head.


The monarchy’s survival hinges on public consent, which is built on a foundation of perceived morality and integrity. By acting against Prince Andrew, the Firm attempted to draw a line in the sand. But the tide of scandal was not coming from one direction alone. That line is now being washed away, revealing a much wider landscape of uncomfortable connections and historical shadows.


The natural consequence of stripping Andrew Windsor is the legitimisation of these very questions. The monarchy, in its attempt to quarantine a scandal, may have inadvertently confirmed that the infection is systemic. According to the new standard it has set, it will only be a matter of time before the public demands to know why the man at the very top appears to be exempt from the same rules. The precedent has been set. The King, now, sits squarely within its scope.


No comments:

Post a Comment

Please show your appreciation with a donation.