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Prince Andrew ‘forever tainted’ by sex abuse settlement and ‘unlikely to return as working royal’

Monarchy irrevocably ‘tainted’ by Duke of York’s association with Epstein ‘and there’s no going back on that,’ says royal expert

Aine Fox
Tuesday 15 February 2022 19:16 GMT
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Prince Andrew and Virginia Giuffre reach out-of-court settlement in sexual abuse lawsuit
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The Duke of York is unlikely to ever return to public royal life having been "tainted" by the scandal of a civil sex assault claim against him, royal experts have said.

Language used in public court documents about an out-of-court settlement being agreed with his accuser Virginia Giuffre suggests Andrew has "finally been humbled", one commentator said, while another added that there is "no going back" in terms of frontline duties for the Queen's second son.

Royal author Penny Junor said the settlement is likely to come as a "huge relief" to the rest of the royal family, with a trial having threatened to take "the shine off the Queen's Platinum Jubilee year".

She told the PA news agency: "Going to trial, it could have been very, very nasty.

"It could have been embarrassing, humiliating, and it would have been huge fodder for the tabloid press.

"It could have really taken the shine off the Queen's Platinum Jubilee year."

She said there has been a "complete change of tone" with regard to Andrew's association with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, with the royal having "got it right now" with his language.

A court document published on Tuesday stated that Andrew "regrets his association with Epstein, and commends the bravery of Ms Giuffre and other survivors in standing up for themselves and others".

Ms Junor said: "At last, he's expressing some regret and some empathy for those girls.

She said Andrew's 2019 Newsnight interview had been "all about him", adding: "He's got it right now, it took him a long time to get there but I think he's got it right."

She said it is "very, very unlikely" he can ever return to public royal life, as a "question mark" will always remain in the wake of a settlement as opposed to a trial which would have seen one side gain a legal victory over the other.

She said: "Somebody was lying, and we will now never know who it was. So I think that means Andrew is tarnished.

"The statement was good and it was a long time coming for those expressions of remorse and empathy. It's good that he's finally got there, that he's finally made that kind of statement but I don't think it exculpates him completely from the past."

Echoing such sentiments, Joe Little, of Majesty magazine, said Andrew will "forever be tainted".

He told PA: "I just don't think he's ever likely to resume work as a working member of the royal family.

"I think that too much water has gone under the bridge for that and the institution of monarchy has been tainted by his association with Epstein and I just think that there's no going back on all that."

Ms Junor added: "It sounds as though he has finally been humbled."

"I think the problem with Prince Andrew is he has always seemed to display a sense of entitlement, an arrogance which might lead him to think that he could come back to public life but I think it's very, very unlikely."

PA

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