News
William ‘will not forgive’ Andrew scandal and plans royal ban
PRINCE William is said to be taking a far tougher stance on his uncle, the disgraced Prince Andrew, with reports suggesting he plans to exclude him from all royal duties — including his future coronation.
The heir to the throne is understood to have been consulted before Friday’s announcement that Andrew would give up his Duke of York title and remaining honours. However, senior royal sources told The Sunday Times that William is “not satisfied” with the outcome and intends to deal with what has been called “the Andrew problem” more decisively when he becomes king.
Police examining smear allegations
It also emerged that Prince Andrew allegedly tried to launch a smear campaign against his accuser, Virginia Giuffre, by asking his police bodyguard to dig up personal information about her in 2011. The Mail on Sunday reported that Andrew gave the officer Ms Giuffre’s date of birth and social security number and suggested she had a criminal record.
The Metropolitan Police confirmed it is “looking into the claims” following the report.

Title and honours surrendered
In a statement issued on Friday, Andrew said he was surrendering his title and honours “to avoid distracting from the work of the monarch and the royal family”. He remains a prince and continues to live at the 30-bedroom Royal Lodge in Windsor.
Andrew’s decision came after a series of damaging revelations about his ties to convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, including a newly surfaced 2011 email in which Andrew reportedly told Epstein “we’re in this together” — months after he claimed to have severed contact.
The move to strip Andrew of his dukedom was made by King Charles after discussions with William and other senior royals.
Future ban from royal events
The Sunday Times reported that William will go further when he becomes king, permanently excluding Andrew from public and private royal life — including his own coronation and most state occasions.
Andrew’s ex-wife, Sarah Ferguson, is also expected to be left out of future royal events, though their daughters, Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie, will remain welcome at family gatherings.
Public rejection
Tensions between William and Andrew have long been visible. At the funeral of the Duchess of Kent in September, Andrew was seen attempting to speak to his nephew on the cathedral steps, but William stared ahead without responding.
King Charles has already banned Andrew from joining the family for the traditional Christmas Day service, and Friday’s statement is seen by royal watchers as his final banishment.
Civil case and gag order
In 2022, Andrew paid millions to settle a civil sexual assault claim brought by Ms Giuffre, who alleged she was trafficked by Epstein and forced to have sex with the prince when she was 17 — allegations Andrew has always denied.
Ms Giuffre’s forthcoming memoir, due out on Tuesday, claims Andrew insisted on a one-year gag order as part of the settlement to ensure the scandal did not overshadow the late Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee.
She wrote that Andrew’s disastrous 2019 Newsnight interview acted as “an injection of jet fuel” for her legal team and described gaining not only financial compensation but “acknowledgement that I and many other women had been victimised.”
Andrew’s 2019 interview became infamous after he claimed he could not have met Ms Giuffre because he was at Pizza Express with his daughter Beatrice and said he did not regret his friendship with Epstein.
Ms Giuffre died by suicide in April this year. Her memoir’s release has renewed pressure on the monarchy as the King prepares to meet Pope Francis at the Vatican — a visit palace insiders say is aimed at “closing a painful chapter” for the royal family.
Local Government
Sewage leak at Pembroke Commons prompts urgent clean-up works
Council pollution officers say they have no enforcement powers over Welsh Water infrastructure
SEWAGE contamination on the Commons in Pembroke has prompted an urgent response from pollution officers, after a leak was reported by a member of the public on Tuesday.
PEMBROKESHIRE County Council’s Pollution Control Team confirmed they were alerted yesterday afternoon to sewage surrounding a manhole cover on the site. The Herald understands that officers immediately notified Welsh Water (DCWW) network technicians to investigate the incident “as a matter of urgency”.
County councillor Jonathan Grimes, who represents Pembroke St Mary South and Monkton, said the authority had been clear that it holds no enforcement powers over Welsh Water assets.
“Whilst we work constructively with Welsh Water, we have no authority to intervene on their apparatus or to carry out enforcement action against them for such pollution incidents,” the Pollution Control Team said in a statement shared with the councillor.
Urgent works underway
Council officers visited the site on Wednesday morning alongside contractors and Welsh Water technicians to assess clean-up options. According to the team, works will include cleaning the contaminated ground in and around the manhole cover and fencing off the affected area “until safe”.
Cllr Grimes said officers would return to the scene on Thursday to check on progress and ensure the area is properly secured.
Residents who notice any further issues have been urged to contact the Pollution Control Team directly.
Further updates are expected later this week.
Local Government
Pembrokeshire Council faces backlash over £2.5m housing ‘buying spree’
Critics say policy inflates numbers while new-build programme stalls
PEMBROKESHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL is under growing pressure over its multi-million-pound programme of buying back former council houses, with critics warning that the strategy gives the illusion of progress while long-promised new-builds remain stuck on the drawing board.
The latest criticism comes from Milford Haven councillor Mike Stoddart, who has accused the authority of “standing still” by funnelling Housing Revenue Account (HRA) cash into purchasing properties that were once part of the council’s own stock.
Stoddart said the council’s approach “doesn’t increase the housing stock – it merely moves people from the private sector into the public sector”.
He added: “It would be much better if the money was spent on building anew.”
A temporary fix that became permanent
The buy-back scheme began in 2017 when the council adopted a new inflation-linked rent regime that delivered sizeable HRA surpluses. At the time, officers described buying ex-council homes on the open market as a “stop-gap” measure until the new-build programme ramped up.
But that programme has repeatedly faltered. Major schemes in Johnston and Tiers Cross have been hit by cost overruns of around 66%. In Milford Haven, new flats on Charles Street are costing close to £300,000 each for a one- or two-bed unit, before adding land costs, architects’ fees and planning expenses.

Stoddart said the pattern amounted to a “disaster”, arguing that buying existing homes had become the authority’s default option. “It gives the impression of making progress while actually standing still,” he said.
Brownfield sites left idle
In Stoddart’s own ward, three former school sites have stood empty since 2018. Their redevelopment is not expected to begin until 2027 or 2028. Meanwhile, the council’s purchasing programme has accelerated.
A Cabinet report for late 2025 shows more than £2.5 million spent on acquisitions in just the first half of the year.
The most striking deal was a bulk purchase of five homes in Harcourt Close, Hook, for £1.851 million — almost £400,000 each. Stoddart said the developer would think “all his birthdays have come at once”, with the council avoiding estate agents’ fees, reducing legal costs and allowing the seller to immediately stop paying interest to the bank.
Thirteen high-value purchases
All properties were bought for over £100,000 and moved into the council’s HRA stock:
| Address | Location | Price | Completion |
|---|---|---|---|
| 32 Southdown Close | Pembroke | £115,000 | 29/07/2025 |
| 8 Hyfrydle | Letterston | £115,000 | 01/08/2025 |
| 6 Precelly Place | Milford Haven | £120,000 | 22/09/2025 |
| 50 Heywood Court | Tenby | £125,000 | 02/10/2025 |
| 33 Croft Avenue | Hakin, Milford Haven | £130,000 | 20/10/2025 |
| 7 Hyfrydle | Letterston | £135,000 | 05/09/2025 |
| 18 St Clements Park | Freystrop | £140,000 | 14/07/2025 |
| 55 College Park | Neyland | £140,000 | 28/10/2025 |
| 26 Baring Gould Way | Haverfordwest | £146,000 | 15/08/2025 |
| 25 Station Road | Letterston | £170,000 | 10/10/2025 |
| 16 Woodlands Crescent | Milford Haven | £283,000 | 31/10/2025 |
| 26 & 27 Harcourt Close | Hook | £744,000 | 22/10/2025 |
| 23, 24 & 25 Harcourt Close | Hook | £1,107,000 | 30/07/2025 |
All purchases were made from HRA reserves with no borrowing, a point the council highlights as prudent financial management.
Fears over market distortion
Stoddart also warned that the authority’s deep pockets may be pricing out young families by outbidding first-time buyers for entry-level homes. “If classical economic theory is to be believed, it’s forcing up the price,” he said.
House prices in Pembrokeshire have risen around 15% in the past year, according to recent ONS data. Local estate agents, speaking anonymously, told this newspaper that council intervention “definitely nudges prices upward” in hotspots like Hook, Neyland and Milford Haven.
Council defends strategy
A council spokesperson said the approach was necessary to deliver homes “immediately” amid chronic shortages.
“Acquiring existing properties allows us to respond quickly to housing need,” they said. “New-builds remain a priority, but delays in planning, construction and funding mean we must use all available tools to meet demand. All purchases represent value for money and are compliant with our HRA strategy.”
Housing charity Shelter Cymru took a different view, arguing that “recycling stock is not a substitute for expansion”. The charity says Pembrokeshire needs around 500 new affordable homes a year to meet demand.
‘Residents deserve homes, not headaches’
Social housing waiting lists in Pembrokeshire now exceed 2,000 applicants. With another Cabinet briefing due later this month, Stoddart says he will push for a fundamental rethink.
“It’s time to stop standing still,” he told this newspaper. “Our residents deserve homes, not headaches.”
News
Angle RNLI launch stood down after false distress beacon alert
ANGLE RNLI were paged at 10:47am this morning after an EPIRB (Emergency Position Indicating Radio Beacon) was triggered on a local fishing vessel in the Dale Roads area.
Dale Coastguard Rescue Team was also tasked to investigate the alert.
As the lifeboat crew prepared to launch, further checks by HM Coastguard — along with direct contact from the vessel’s skipper — confirmed the beacon had been activated accidentally.
With no-one found to be in difficulty, the launch was cancelled.
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