Strip away the titles. Remove the deference. Ignore the choreography of palace language. The real question is brutally simple:
Can a man born into monarchy ever truly be treated as equal before the law?
The name is Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.
The role once included UK trade envoy.
The shadow that follows him traces back to association with Jeffrey Epstein — and the reputational wreckage that never quite settles.
Now the debate moves from moral discomfort to legal territory: misconduct in public office.
And here is where it gets serious. Misconduct in public office is not gossip. It is not social disgrace. It is not political embarrassment. It is a criminal allegation that strikes at one principle:
abuse of public trust.
If a public official knowingly misuses confidential access, leverages state privilege improperly, or acts in a way that damages the integrity of the office they hold — that is not aristocratic misjudgement.
That is potentially criminal conduct.
The law does not ask:
•Were you royal?
•Were you powerful?
•Were you diplomatically useful?
It asks:
•Did you wilfully abuse the authority given to you? •Did you breach trust in a serious way?
That threshold is high — as it should be. But it is blind. Or it must be.
Because if the threshold bends for royalty, it breaks for everyone else.
The British monarchy survives on one unspoken contract: It is symbolic, not sovereign in practice.
Ceremonial, not above scrutiny.
If a member of that institution — especially one entrusted with representing Britain abroad — falls under criminal investigation, the issue is larger than one individual.
It becomes constitutional theatre.
If charges never materialise, the law will have spoken.
If they do, the courtroom will become the ultimate leveller.
What cannot happen — in a modern democracy — is quiet ambiguity sustained by rank.
Public trust is oxygen.
Once contaminated, it spreads. The real test here is not whether Andrew is guilty or innocent.
The test is whether the system has the courage to treat him like anyone else. Because monarchy may be inherited.
But accountability must never be optional.









