MPs urged
to confront royal family over Prince Andrew’s Epstein links
Calls
grow for parliamentary rule changes to strip Andrew of titles and ask questions
of royals
Eleni
Courea, Alexandra Topping and Hannah Al-Othman
Sun 19
Oct 2025 21.28 BST
Parliament
is under mounting pressure to examine what the royal family knew about Prince
Andrew’s links to Jeffrey Epstein and introduce a mechanism to strip him of his
titles.
There
were calls on Sunday night for Andrew to face a police investigation and for
ancient rules barring parliament from freely scrutinising royals and formally
removing their titles to be revisited.
The
Metropolitan police confirmed they were looking into claims that Andrew asked
his Met bodyguard to dig up information on Virginia Giuffre, who had accused
him of sexual assault, hours before the bombshell picture of them was published
in 2011.
Ed
Miliband, the energy secretary, said leaked emails suggesting Andrew passed his
close protection officer Giuffre’s date of birth and US social security number
were “deeply concerning”.
A
spokesperson for the Metropolitan police said: “We are aware of media reporting
and are actively looking into the claims made.”
The
developing scandal forced Andrew to relinquish some of his royal titles on
Friday, including Duke of York, having already lost the use of his HRH title
after ceasing to be a “working royal”.
He
retains the dukedom, which would take an act of parliament to remove, while his
status as a prince could only be removed if a letters patent were issued by the
king. Andrew has vigorously denied any wrongdoing, and the FBI formally ended
its investigation into his links to Epstein in July.
But MPs
and campaigners have called for further action including a Metropolitan police
investigation into Andrew’s links to Epstein and an act of parliament to
formally strip the prince of his titles.
Rachael
Maskell, the Labour MP for York Central, said she was writing to ministers this
week to back her bill giving the king or a parliamentary committee the power to
formally remove Andrew’s titles.
“Every
time this comes up, it clearly must be really traumatising for the victims and
survivors, so it’s really important that this matter is dealt with once and for
all,” Maskell said. “There are mechanisms which need to be put in place in
order to remove a title.”
Nadia
Whittome, the Labour MP for Nottingham East, said: “It should be a given that
the state removes Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s titles, rather than allowing him
to hide behind voluntarily renouncing them and mealy-mouthed statements blaming
his accusers.”
Maskell
proposed a removal of titles bill in 2022 which would enable the monarch or a
parliamentary committee to remove titles in Andrew’s case and in the future.
Similar legislation was enacted in 1917 to remove the titles of peers and
princes who fought against the British in the first world war.
One
senior Labour backbencher and select committee chair described Andrew as a
“disgrace” and said he “brings shame on himself and those associated with him”.
“I would
delight in voting for a parliamentary motion to strip him of all his titles,”
they said.
Asked by
the BBC if he would support such legislation, Miliband said “the royal family
will have to make its own decisions about what other steps can be taken” but
that they had suggested “they didn’t want to take up parliamentary time with
this”.
Clive
Lewis, the Labour MP for Norwich South, called for “a proper thorough
investigation into what happened”.
“It’s
very clear the sense of entitlement that Prince Andrew has comes with being a
prince and being part of the monarchy. The bigger story here is the monarchy
itself. This is why I think the king has closed up shop. It poses some very
difficult questions about how power operates in this country,” he said.
George
Foulkes, a Labour peer, wrote to the clerks of the Commons and Lords on Sunday
night asking them to review rules restricting parliamentarians from asking
questions about the royal family.
Foulkes
said that early this year, the Lords table office rejected questions he tried
to ask on Andrew and his 10-year role as a UK special representative for trade
and investment, which the prince finally gave up in 2011 after a string of
controversies.
“I wanted
to ask questions about whether he had a security briefing, what his role was
and a number of other things,” Foulkes said. “I was told by the table office
that questions about the royal family were prohibited in both the Commons and
the Lords.”
Ultimately
Foulkes was allowed to ask some specific questions about royal family
expenditure, which parliament is allowed to question.
Parliamentary
rules state that “questions that cast reflections on the sovereign or the royal
family” more broadly are inadmissible. On Sunday Foulkes called for the rules
to be reviewed “in light of recent events”.
Meanwhile,
more than 1,000 letters were sent to MPs over the weekend urging them to push
for a “full-blown parliamentary or independent inquiry into the royal Epstein
scandal”.
Supporters
of the campaign group Republic wrote to their MPs accusing them of being
complicit in their silence and urging them to call for an immediate
investigation. Republic have called for an inquiry to look at actions taken by
the Met police and for Andrew to face prosecution.
“It is
not credible to believe that the Met would not have informed senior royals of
Andrew’s attempts to use them to smear Giuffre. There are also questions as to
why the Met continues to refuse to investigate, interview or charge Andrew,”
said Republic’s Graham Smith.
“Public
anger is what’s going to push this forward and there is a palpable anger among
the public who can see that Andrew being stripped of the use of his titles is
no punishment at all.”
The
Guardian published an extract from Giuffre’s posthumous memoir last week in
which she detailed her first encounter with the “entitled” prince and said he
“believed having sex with me was his birthright”.
The Mail
on Sunday published messages Andrew allegedly sent to Ed Perkins, then the
queen’s deputy press secretary, in 2011 saying he had asked one of his close
protection officers to obtain information about Giuffre.
According
to the messages, Andrew told Perkins he had given the officer Giuffre’s date of
birth and nine-digit social security number and claimed she had a criminal
record in the US. The email was sent hours before the publication of an
infamous picture of Andrew with 17-year-old Giuffre.
Her
family has said she had no criminal record. There is no suggestion the police
officer complied with the request.
Another
leaked email obtained by the Mail on Sunday suggests that Andrew’s ex-wife,
Sarah Ferguson, took Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie, then 20 and 19, to visit
Epstein in New York after he was released from prison.
After a
newspaper interview given by Ferguson in 2011 in which she said her association
with him was a “terrible error of judgment”, Epstein wrote to Paul Tweed, his
UK-based lawyer, in April 2011, and said she was “the first to celebrate my
release”. A source close to Ferguson said that neither she nor her daughters
had any recollection of such a visit.

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