Britain once stood as the world’s unyielding shield – forged in Magna Carta’s fire, tempered by Elizabeth I’s resolve, and steeled by Churchill’s defiance. From across the Atlantic, where we enlightened Americans still trace our liberty to your common law and political traditions, we watch with unease as the Royal Family – once a byword for dignity and duty – slides toward unreality. These days, royal rogues have cast a reputational shadow so that Britain resembles less the Land of Hope and Glory, and more the Land of Oz.
The monarchy depends on a respect that cannot coexist with double standards
The misdeeds of the Yorks and Sussexes are not merely distractions. They are symptoms of institutional confusion – an inability to distinguish between public service and personal indulgence, between symbolism and spectacle. But amid this decline, there are encouraging signs of resolve. The King and Prince of Wales have begun – carefully, but firmly – to reassert standards. And in doing so, they have shown they understand an essential truth of monarchy: it survives only so long as the public trusts and respects it.
Prince Andrew’s relinquishment of his use of the Duke of York title and associated honours did not happen in a vacuum. Though described as ‘voluntary’, it followed growing internal and external pressure – not least from the King and his heir, who recognised that the scandal endangers the Crown itself. The monarchy is not a private club. It is a public trust. When that trust is abused, action must follow, and thankfully, it seems that it has.
The allegations against Andrew, which are likely to be revisited in Virginia Giuffre’s forthcoming memoir, are radioactive. Leaked emails from 2011 suggest he attempted to discredit his accuser. The beloved late Queen’s instinct was to protect her son as well as the institution she headed; her son and grandson are focusing on the institution.
It must go further. Sarah Ferguson’s financial ties to Epstein reinforce the lingering scandal – just out of frame. There can be no half-measures. The monarchy cannot afford to remain ambiguous about what it will tolerate. Titles, like public funds, are conferred with an expectation of integrity. If that expectation is shattered, the honour should be withdrawn – not just in use, but in law.
Yet if the Yorks represent scandal, the Sussexes represent something just as corrosive: envy and vendetta. Since their 2020 departure from royal duties, Harry and Meghan have attempted to remain royalty in name, but not in function. They left the institution, but not its privileges. They have used their Duke and Duchess of Sussex titles to promote memoirs, podcasts, Netflix deals and charitable ventures – all while criticising the very system that gave those titles meaning.
They are saboteurs. The late Queen made it clear that being ‘half in, half out’ was not an option. She rightly understood that monarchy is not a marketing strategy – it is a compact with the people. To retain a title while disavowing the responsibilities it implies is insulting.
The Sussexes’ narrative – that they were victims of palace cruelty, racial insensitivity, and media hostility – has been rehearsed across American talk shows and documentary specials. And yet they cling to the very labels they claim have brought them pain. This is not a new model of monarchy. It is a kind of constitutional cosplay that cheapens Britain’s most enduring institution.
The King and Prince William have been measured in their response. They have avoided public recrimination, opting instead for firmness through silence. But silence is not sustainable forever. It seems they sense that public patience is wearing thin. The monarchy’s strength lies in the fact that it stands above partisanship, above fashion and above self-interest. When that symbolism is appropriated for personal enrichment or wielded in defiance of the Crown’s own values, the damage is unbearable.
The public understand this. The monarchy depends on respect that cannot coexist with double standards. It cannot survive the perception that one tier of royalty is held accountable, while another is free to monetise its connection to the throne. Restraint is dignified only if matched by resolution.
The answer is not revenge. It is restoration. The monarchy has always evolved to preserve its core – and now it must do so again. Parliament should act, if necessary, to finalise the withdrawal of Andrew’s titles and remove the Sussex titles altogether. This is not pettiness, it is existential. Titles, like trust, must be earned – and safeguarded.
As an outsider, let me share that Britain has long been admired not for its pageantry alone, but for the seriousness behind it. Today, that seriousness is at risk. The world processes the spectacle but it also watches how Britain responds.
The Land of Hope and Glory cannot afford to become the Land of Oz. The monarchy cannot survive as both theatre and anchor. It must choose – and there is hope that it is beginning to choose wisely.
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