Royalist

Royals Deliver Double Snub to Disgraced Andrew and His Children

NO CARRIAGE AWAITS

Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie have been told they won’t ride in a royal carriage this year at Ascot. But who made the decision?

Prince Andrew
Mark Cuthbert/UK Press via Getty Images

Prince William scores two notable victories in the British Sunday newspapers.

According to The Mail on Sunday, Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie have been told they will not ride in the royal carriage procession at Royal Ascot in June, while The Sunday Times says that William has been lobbying for Andrew to be officially removed from the line of succession since last year.

As readers of The Royalist will know, William has long urged his father to cut the York family completely out of royal life and has despaired at his father’s half-measures on the matter. His anguish has increased as the Epstein files have revealed the depth of the former Prince Andrew’s and the wider York clan’s involvement with the scandal.

The Royal Ascot carriage parade, from which Andrew’s daughters have supposedly been banned, is one of the set pieces of the royal year, a highly visible marker of who is “in” and who is “out.” It has traditionally showcased the York family, with Andrew and his daughters very much part of the core line-up. To be excluded from that procession is a very public demotion.

Princess Eugenie (center) with Mr and Mrs. Ed Walker arrive by royal carriage during day five of Royal Ascot at Ascot Racecourse, Berkshire. Picture date: Saturday June 21, 2025.
Princess Eugenie (center) with Mr. and Mrs. Ed Walker arrive by royal carriage during day five of Royal Ascot at Ascot Racecourse, Berkshire, on June 21, 2025. The invitation to ride in a carriage is seen as a marker of who’s in and who’s out of favor at the palace. John Walton/PA Images via Getty Images

Behind the scenes, this looks very much like a win for William. For years, he was infuriated by what he saw as his father’s ambivalent approach toward Andrew and Sarah Ferguson. Now that the king has finally had his road-to-Damascus moment, William fears he is making the same mistake with their daughters.

And indeed, King Charles has consistently signaled that, whatever happens to Andrew, his children should not be punished for the sins of their father. That message was underlined just three months ago when, days after Andrew was formally stripped of his remaining titles and honors, Princess Beatrice was appointed Deputy Patron of the Outward Bound Trust, a charity closely associated with the late Prince Philip.

Allies of William, however, believed the king should at least have waited to see what else might emerge from the vast cache of U.S. Department of Justice “Epstein files” before elevating Beatrice in this way. That caution now looks prescient.

The latest documents and emails released in January mention the York family repeatedly. They show, among other things, that Sarah Ferguson took her adult children, Beatrice and Eugenie, to visit Jeffrey Epstein in Miami less than a week after his release from prison in July 2009, with Epstein apparently paying thousands of dollars for their flights, and that she later described him in an email as “the brother I have always wished for.”

HRH Princess Eugenie of York, Sarah Ferguson, The Duchess of York and HRH Princess Beatrice of York attend the opening of the Teenage Cancer Trust Unit at the Great North Children's Hospital on May 19, 2010 in Newcastle upon Tyne, England. (Photo by Indigo/Getty Images)
Princess Eugenie, Sarah Ferguson, and Princess Beatrice. Ferguson’s relationship with the late sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein was deeper than most people suspected. Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images

Further emails suggest Ferguson continued to lean on Epstein for money and advice even after his conviction, including asking him to upgrade flights so she and the “girls” could visit, and discussing her “Mothers’ Army” and other projects with him.

Separate correspondence shows Princess Beatrice involved in media-management discussions about how her mother’s relationship with Epstein should be framed, and references a possible 2015 trip in which “Princess Beatrice will be joining” an Epstein party in Mexico.

Although there is no suggestion she committed any criminal wrongdoing, the overall picture these documents paint is of a family far more deeply entwined with Epstein than previously believed.

At the same time, long-standing questions about the York sisters’ lifestyle and public role have re-emerged. More than a decade ago, as part of Charles’ drive for a “slimmed-down monarchy,” Beatrice and Eugenie lost their taxpayer-funded police protection and were told they were not working royals.

Reports at the time highlighted the high security costs associated with their frequent foreign trips and travel, and cemented the idea in some royal circles that the Yorks enjoyed the trappings of royal life without a clearly defined public role.

William has long been cool toward his York cousins.

One long-remembered flashpoint came when he did not invite their mother, Sarah Ferguson, to his wedding, a decision that left the girls deeply upset and convinced he was being mean.

In their eyes, they were among the first to be pushed out of the inner royal circle once Charles’ slimming-down agenda began to bite. That history helps explain why, when Harry and Meghan left the royal family, Beatrice and Eugenie instinctively aligned themselves with the Sussexes.

That alignment was made very visible when Harry and Meghan allowed Princess Eugenie and her husband, Jack Brooksbank, to move into Frogmore Cottage when they moved to America. The five-bedroom Windsor home had been renovated at great expense before Megxit, and the Sussexes were subsequently obliged to surrender it back to the Crown.

LONDON, ENGLAND - SEPTEMBER 19:  Princess Beatrice of York, Princess Eugenie of York and Meghan, Duchess of Sussex during the State Funeral of Queen Elizabeth II at Westminster Abbey on September 19, 2022 in London, England.  Elizabeth Alexandra Mary Windsor was born in Bruton Street, Mayfair, London on 21 April 1926. She married Prince Philip in 1947 and ascended the throne of the United Kingdom and Commonwealth on 6 February 1952 after the death of her Father, King George VI. Queen Elizabeth II died at Balmoral Castle in Scotland on September 8, 2022, and is succeeded by her eldest son, King Charles III. (Photo by Samir Hussein/WireImage)
Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie stand behind Meghan Markle during the funeral of Queen Elizabeth II at Westminster Abbey on Sept. 19, 2022. Samir Hussein/WireImage

Eugenie was later photographed visiting the Sussexes in California, including a high-profile outing to the Super Bowl after the couple had settled in Montecito.

For many at the palace, these were clear signals that the York sisters saw themselves in Harry and Meghan’s camp—fellow exiles who felt they had been sidelined by an uncaring institution.

Now, that calculation looks unwise.

Harry and Meghan are heavily invested in portraying themselves as morally and socially above the behavior of the royal institution.

In the wake of the Epstein files, no one seeking that kind of high moral ground wants even a second-hand association with anyone whose family is so directly entangled in the scandal. Meghan’s own name has been dragged into the online frenzy due to an occasional mention in the files, but reputable coverage has stressed that claims linking her to Epstein are misleading and unsupported by evidence.

By contrast, the material on Andrew and Ferguson and the princesses is extensive, and the princesses now have to live with the fact that their parents’ decisions are being raked over in painful detail.

Sources say that last year, in what some saw as a last-chance for the princesses, William and Catherine privately proposed that Beatrice and Eugenie submit their finances to an ethical forensic accountant, so that an independent audit could clear them of any suspicion about how they funded their lavish lifestyles as teenagers and young women. That offer was rejected. The sisters chose to rely on the defense that they had done nothing wrong and that, as private individuals with jobs, their money was their own business.

SANDRINGHAM, NORFOLK - DECEMBER 25: King Charles III, Princess Anne, Princess Royal, Princess Eugenie of York and Queen Camilla attend the Christmas Morning Service at Sandringham Church on December 25, 2025 in Sandringham, Norfolk. (Photo by Jordan Peck/Getty Images)
King Charles III, Princess Anne, Princess Eugenie and Queen Camilla attend the Christmas Morning Service at Sandringham Church on Dec. 25, 2025. Jordan Peck/Getty Images

Publicly, the picture at Christmas this year seemed far more positive when Beatrice and Eugenie made a surprise appearance on the Sandringham church walk, joining King Charles, Queen Camilla and the Prince and Princess of Wales for the traditional Christmas Day service at St Mary Magdalene.

Coverage at the time framed their presence – with Eugenie and Jack Brooksbank walking prominently near the front of the procession – as a notable show of unity and alignment with the wider royal family.

But it was notable that William did not speak publicly with either of them. Today’s Royal Ascot carriage decision makes clear that William does not want the York sisters anywhere near the top tier of royal representation.

The second victory for William today comes via the London Sunday Times, which reports that last year he pushed for Andrew to be stripped of his place in the line of succession altogether.

Andrew remains, absurdly, eighth in line to the throne despite having been forced out of public life and arrested on suspicion of misconduct in public office over alleged sharing of confidential trade information linked to Epstein.

Prince Andrew, Duke of York, and Prince William, Prince of Wales, attend Katharine, Duchess of Kent's Requiem Mass service at Westminster Cathedral on September 16, 2025 in London, England.
Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor remains eighth in line to the throne, a situation Prince William, right, is reportedly keen to change. Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images

The government has since confirmed that it is actively considering legal changes to remove Andrew from the succession, a step that would require an act of Parliament and parallel moves in up to 14 Commonwealth realms where the king is head of state. Australia and New Zealand have already indicated they would back such a move.

While constitutional experts warn that the process could be complex and time-consuming, at Westminster, there is growing cross-party pressure for Andrew to be removed, with polls showing overwhelming public support for his exclusion.

The Sunday Times reports that William was pushing for this last year, which is significant not just for what it says about his private position but also because it is being briefed into the public domain at this particular moment.

Taken together, today’s developments—the Ascot carriage bombshell and the confirmation that William has been lobbying to remove Andrew from the succession—fit neatly into a broader pattern.

Over recent months, The Royalist has been reporting that when William becomes king he is planning a bonfire of titles, using royal letters patent to strip non-working royals, including Andrew and the Sussexes, of their HRH styles and princely rank.

The aim is a much tighter, more controlled monarchy in which only a small inner circle carries the burden—and the risk—of representing the crown.

Against that backdrop, barring Beatrice and Eugenie from the Royal Ascot carriage procession looks less like a one-off snub and more like an early skirmish in a larger campaign.

On the evidence of today, William’s hard line—and not his father’s softer, more forgiving approach—is now shaping their royal future.

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