A UK barrister has a warning for the royals suggesting that the bedrock of British culture is under a strain that it may never truly recover.

The shadow of Jeffrey Epstein continues to loom over Buckingham Palace, with legal experts and royal commentators warning that the ongoing bombshell revelations surrounding Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor are no longer just a personal disgrace but a terminal threat to the monarchy itself. UK Barrister Andrew Eborn recently issued a blunt assessment of the situation, suggesting that the damage currently being โdrippedโ into the public consciousness will leave a mark that can never be erased.
Speaking to Sky News, Eborn opined, โIt is, I would say, one of the biggest existential threats โฆ they need to be having a look at how they are dealing with it.โ According to the Barrister, the main issue lies not just in the past actions of the disgraced royal but in the Royal Familyโs inability to stem the flow of damaging information. While talking to presenter Gabriella Power, he pointed specifically to the โrelationship and accessโ granted to Epstein at Buckingham Palace as the catalyst of the scandal that continues to haunt the institution. โThe more they are revealed and the more theyโre not dealt with, the more itโs going to scar the Royal Family forever,โ he observed.

Not just Eborn, but several other royal experts have also voiced their concerns regarding the impact the Andrew-Epstein controversy is having on the monarchy. Just a couple of weeks ago, veteran commentator Amanda Platell penned a scathing critique of the scandal, noting that the Firm is dangerously out of touch with the severity of the โAndrew problem.โ Writing for the Daily Mail, she doubted how the Royal Family would ever move past the โsordid disgraceโ of the former Dukeโs contentious ties with the disgraced financier, especially after the release of new files suggesting that Mountbatten-Windsor and his former wife, Sarah Ferguson, may have misrepresented how long they were actually involved with him.
She noted that the late Queen Elizabeth IIโs decision to help fund Mountbatten-Windsorโs ยฃ12 million (about $16 million) settlement with his accuser, Virginia Giuffre, blocked a court case that might have sealed the wound. Instead, she argues, the issue remains an unresolved scandal for the monarchy. โCan the royals ever rid themselves of the terrible stench of Andrew, who is still risibly eighth in line to the throne?โ she questioned.

The consensus among these experts is that the Royal Family has reached a critical crossroads. For the royals, the โpermanent scarโ Eborn describes is a warning that the bedrock of British culture is under a strain that it may never truly recover.





