Ringleader of British grooming gang told to hit the road...
   Prince Andrew is losing his 'Prince' title and his royal estate
  Updated
  King Charles’s brother will now be known only as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor
 
  
  Prince Andrew to lose ‘Prince’ title, Buckingham Palace announces
  October 30
  King  Charles has stripped his brother, Andrew, of his royal title following  years of controversy about his ties with the late sex offender Jeffery  Epstein. Buckingham Palace said Andrew's titles, honours and lease on  his home, the Royal Lodge, would be surrendered.
  The Latest- Prince  Andrew, the younger brother of King Charles III, is losing his lifelong  title of "prince" as well as other honours over continued scandals  surrounding his past behaviour.
 - Buckingham Palace announced on Thursday that Andrew will now be known as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor.
 - A statement said he will also move out of the Royal Lodge, the home in Windsor Great Park he has had for decades.
 - Constitutional  experts said the move is unprecedented in the Royal Family’s modern  history, marking “the first genuine royal crisis” of Charles’s reign.
  What’s next for the Royal Family?
 
  
  Andrew leaving Westminster Cathedral with the Royal Family on Sept. 16. (Toby Melville/Reuters) As  much as today’s censures of Andrew are a significant development, much  remains to be seen about how the Royal Family moves forward from the  scandals that have surrounded him.
  A lot will depend on how the  King’s moves are received by the public, and the extent to which Andrew,  who has been seen at family moments such as the recent funeral of  Katharine, Duchess of Kent, disappears from public view. 
  “I think  when you look at most of the crises about the monarchy, it's when the  monarchy is out of step with public opinion and out of step with  parliamentary opinion,” Prescott told me earlier this week.
  Today’s announcement could have some impact.
  “The  statement from the King was clear, especially when saying, ‘these  censures are deemed necessary, notwithstanding the fact that he  continues to deny the allegations against him,’” Prescott told me just  now.
  “It’s clearly distancing Andrew from the rest of the  monarchy, which is reinforced by moving him to Sandringham. This move  has put the monarchy back in step with public opinion and opinion in  Parliament.”
  How long that lasts will only emerge over time.
  We’re ending our live coverage now, but we’ll have more coverage in our biweekly 
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