Prince Andrew in talks with Palace to move out of Royal Lodge: Report
- On Friday, Prince Andrew is engaged in advanced talks with Buckingham Palace officials about leaving Royal Lodge, as the palace intensifies efforts to secure a voluntary handover due to his tenancy.
- Public outrage over a long-running rent-free arrangement and recent memoir revelations prompted renewed pressure, leading Prince Andrew to relinquish use of his Duke of York title last Friday.
- Documents released on Monday show previously censored rent details, revealing a `peppercorn` rent clause and Prince Andrew’s `cast iron` lease, while his millions spent on Royal Lodge renovations complicate compensation talks.
- The Public Accounts Committee has begun contacting the Crown Estate and Treasury for answers, while symbolic penalties like removing Andrew’s royal banner at St George’s Chapel, Windsor Castle, increase urgency as Buckingham Palace seeks to avoid a drawn-out inquiry.
- Potential solutions include moving Prince Andrew to Sandringham or Balmoral as privately-owned options, but his preference to stay near London or Windsor and compensation disputes involving the Crown Estate and Treasury complicate talks.
96 Articles
96 Articles
Tricky housing situation: The ex-duke of York Prince Andrew is to leave the Royal Lodge and now negotiates with King Charles III.
King Charles III intends to convince his brother to leave the Royal Lodge: meanwhile the banner has been removed. That's what's going on.
UK's Prince Andrew under pressure over royal home, titles
Britain's scandal-tarred Prince Andrew faced continued scrutiny Sunday of his contentious living arrangements and titles, amid reports of talks with King Charles III about vacating his 30-room royal residence.
The British Royal House Is Pushing Prince Andrew to Leave Windsor's Mansion Where He Lives for Free.
In a discreet way, with the will to filter it later conveniently to the media, the British royal house carried out this week a first symbolic maneuver to expel Prince Andrew from the castle complex of Windsor, where he resides. The banner of the Duke of York as a member of the Order of the Garter, which waved along with others in the chapel of St. George -where the remains of Elizabeth II rest - was removed.
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