The royal family is unusual in many respects, and punishing people by not allowing them to go to church is one of their oddities.
Such a sorry fate potentially awaits Prince Andrew, with speculation rife that King Charles may distance himself from his brother on Christmas Day amid controversy that Andrew allegedly befriended a Chinese spy.
A report in the London Times said the king “could” ban the duke from joining the royals on their annual walk to church in Sandringham.
Andrew was previously banned from attending the Christmas Day service (and photocall) after his disastrous BBC interview in which he failed to express any regret for his association with Jeffrey Epstein. He was readmitted to royal churchgoing society in 2022, but it now looks like the rehabilitation is over.
Supporting the thesis of the Times story, The Daily Beast was told by a friend of the king, “His Majesty’s patience is wearing thin. He has stood by Andrew for many years, but everyone has their limits. I can’t see the king wanting to walk to church with someone who was friends with a Chinese spy.”
Buckingham Palace declined to comment but another friend of the king said: “Andrew is finished. You would have thought it would be hard to find a way to make things worse but somehow he has managed it.”
This week it was revealed that Andrew had befriended the alleged Chinese spy, a businessman known only as H6, who is thought to have been clandestinely operating in the U.K. on behalf of Beijing. Incredibly, Andrew snuck him into his house and other royal palaces.
Andrew reportedly invited the alleged spy to Buckingham Palace twice, to Windsor Castle and St James’s Palace, and to his 60th birthday party.
The alleged spy was stopped at an airport under counterterrorism powers in November 2021. Officers seized his phone, which contained detailed information about their relationship. In one message, Dominic Hampshire, an adviser to the duke, told H6 that he sat “at the very top of a tree” of Andrew’s confidants.