News
Andrew faces public backlash over six-figure ‘relocation payout’
Reports suggest King Charles has privately funded deal to help disgraced royal leave Windsor
ANDREW Mountbatten Windsor is reportedly set to receive a six-figure payout and an annual stipend funded by King Charles as part of a deal to relocate from Royal Lodge in Windsor to a private residence on the Sandringham estate.
Sources quoted by The Guardian and The Independent claim the one-off “relocation settlement” is intended to help the former Duke of York cover the costs of moving and adjusting to private life. It is said the annual payment will come from the King’s private funds and is designed to prevent his younger brother from “overspending in his new life as a commoner.”
Andrew, who receives around £20,000 a year from his naval pension, is understood to have agreed to leave the 30-room Royal Lodge following months of tension with the King over his refusal to downsize. The arrangement follows his removal from royal duties and the recent decision to strip him of his remaining titles and honours.
Titles and reputation stripped
Buckingham Palace confirmed on Thursday that both the King and Queen Camilla’s “thoughts and utmost sympathies remain with the victims and survivors of all forms of abuse.”
The statement came as reports suggested that the decision to finally remove Andrew’s titles was influenced by Camilla’s longstanding involvement with charities supporting victims of domestic and sexual violence. According to The Daily Telegraph, she was “appalled” by Andrew’s ongoing association with convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein and feared it was undermining her work.
The Queen was said to have been “deeply uncomfortable” continuing her patronage of organisations such as SafeLives while Andrew remained a public figure. A new biography by royal correspondent Valentine Low has also revealed that she once fought off a man who groped her as a teenager, strengthening her determination to support survivors.
Royal Lodge dispute ends
The Times reported that Andrew had a “cast-iron” 75-year lease on Royal Lodge but has now served notice to surrender it after lengthy negotiations. His ex-wife Sarah Ferguson, who lived with him at the property, has reportedly chosen not to move to Sandringham and is seeking her own accommodation.
The relocation package would mark the effective end of Andrew’s royal life. He has not undertaken public duties since his disastrous Newsnight interview in 2019 and was excluded as a counsellor of state. His name has now been removed from the official roll of the peerage, meaning the Duke of York title will no longer be used.
Public support for King’s decision
A YouGov poll published on Friday showed overwhelming public backing for the King’s action. Of more than 4,700 adults surveyed, 79 per cent supported stripping Andrew of his titles, though 58 per cent said the royal family had “moved too slowly” to act.
Meanwhile, Downing Street confirmed there are “no plans” for legislation to remove Andrew from the line of succession, where he remains eighth in line to the throne.
Andrew has consistently denied allegations made by Virginia Giuffre that he sexually assaulted her as a teenager. He stepped down from royal duties in 2019 following the interview in which he sought to defend his friendship with Epstein.
The Herald understands that final details of the relocation payout are still being discussed, but the arrangement is likely to be announced once formal papers are exchanged with the Crown Estate and the Treasury.
News
Davies slams claim that separate Welsh legal system is “inevitable”
A POLITICAL row has erupted after Senedd minister Julie James told Members that a separate Welsh legal jurisdiction is “inevitably developing”.
The Minister for Climate Change made the remarks during a plenary session on Tuesday (Nov 11), saying that as more laws are passed in Wales, they are becoming increasingly distinct from those in England.
“A separate Welsh legal jurisdiction is inevitably developing,” Ms James said. “The more laws we make in this place, the more separate they become from the England jurisdiction. Regardless of whether you view it as a separate legal jurisdiction, a separate body of law is growing up in Wales, and lawyers need to be cognisant of that.”
She said she had discussed the issue with the Lady Chief Justice and other senior judges to ensure the developing body of Welsh law is “properly adjudicated”.
Conservative criticism
Her comments drew a sharp response from South Wales Central MS Andrew RT Davies, who accused Labour and Plaid Cymru of using Senedd reform as “a step towards separatism”.
“Plaid and Labour’s plans to spend £120 million on 36 more politicians and a bigger Senedd are rooted in corrosive separatism,” he said.
“The minister’s comments give the game away about their salami-slice approach to breaking our nation apart. Scrap Senedd expansion and fund our NHS.”
Wider debate
Plans to expand the Senedd from 60 to 96 Members have been jointly backed by Labour and Plaid Cymru under their co-operation agreement. Supporters say the change will improve scrutiny and strengthen Welsh democracy.
Opponents, including the Conservatives, argue the cost—estimated at around £120 million over the next decade—cannot be justified during a period of pressure on public services.
The discussion over whether Wales should eventually have its own legal jurisdiction has been ongoing for more than a decade, as devolved law increasingly diverges from that of England.
Crime
Pembroke Dock man admits to having banned samurai sword at home
A PEMBROKE DOCK man has appeared before magistrates after police discovered a samurai sword inside his home.
When officers visited the basement flat on Bush Street on October 23 for an unrelated matter, they found three swords on display – one of which was deemed to fall outside legal limits.
“The officers discovered three swords, one of which was without the criteria of the legislation,” Crown Prosecutor Sian Vaughan told Haverfordwest magistrates this week. “This was because the blade was 22 inches long.”
Defence solicitor Alaw Harries told the court that her client, 34-year-old Mark Briskham, had owned the sword for many years and kept it purely as an ornament.
“It was within his property and not in a public place, which would obviously be much more serious,” she said. “He’s owned the sword for many years, and it’s simply an ornament placed on a stand in a safe place and out of reach.”
After considering the mitigation, magistrates granted Briskham a conditional discharge. He was ordered to pay £85 in court costs and a £26 surcharge. A destruction order was made for the samurai sword.
Crime
Pembroke man denies offensive weapon charge
Court hears hurling stick was for self-defence
A PEMBROKE man has denied possessing an offensive weapon after police found him with a hurling stick outside his home.
Jack Morgan, aged 30, of The Green, Pembroke, appeared before Haverfordwest Magistrates’ Court this week charged with possessing an offensive weapon in a public place.
The court heard that Morgan was arrested at his home on November 7 after police were called to an incident involving several men outside the property.
Defending, solicitor Jess Hill told magistrates that Morgan had only armed himself out of fear.
“Four males were beating on the door and the police were called, but there was a delay,” she said. “Jack Morgan was under considerable fear, so the hurling stick was for his protection.”
Morgan entered a plea of not guilty. The case was adjourned until December 22 for trial.
He was released on conditional bail requiring him to live and sleep at his home address, observe a curfew between 8:00pm and 8:00am, and have no contact with the prosecution witness.
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