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10 Minutes Ago: Queen Camilla’s true thoughts on Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor exposed

10 Minutes Ago: Queen Camilla’s true thoughts on Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor exposed

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor allegedly felt Camilla was “insufficiently aristocratic and that she was not to be trusted”, new revelations reveal. In her book Camilla: From Outcast To Queen Consort, Angela Levin, details the distant relationship between Andrew and Camilla.

The royal expert claims that Andrew went as far as trying to get the late Queen Elizabeth II to call off the couple’s wedding in 2005. She writes: “His behaviour became very, very negative and extremely unpleasant on not getting his way,” a source claimed, adding that Andrew allegedly felt Camilla was “insufficiently aristocratic and that she was not to be trusted”.

He was “quite poisonous, mean, unhelpful and very nasty about Camilla”, they added, as reported in the Daily Mail, and “remained so hostile about Camilla’s acceptance that it’s doubtful it has ever been forgiven”.

The cracks only widened over the years, when Camilla was a no-show when Andrew’s daughter Princess Eugenie’s wedding. Eugenie married Jack Brooksbank, a few months after Meghan Markle married Prince Harry, at St George’s Chapel in Windsor. At the time, Camilla had a commitment to visit Crathie Primary School, located near Balmoral.

Currently, Andrew’s controversies have further distanced him from many senior royals’ public roles. Camilla, as part of the core working royal group alongside Charles, has tended to keep interactions formal and duty-focused.

Speaking as president of the Women of the World group at St James’s Palace in London to mark International Women’s Day, Camilla said boldly, “We stand with you” and gave a powerful speech in defence of the victims and survivors of violence and abuse.

For viewers, it is likely to have been seen as a thinly veiled reference in support of Jeffrey Epstein victims and her brother-in-law, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor’s alleged role.

Being mentioned in the Epstein files is not a sign of wrongdoing, and Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor has denied accusations made against him.

According to royal author Angela Levin, Camilla also felt that Charles’s brother, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, “could have done more” to support her and Charles as a couple at a time when public opinion was strongly opposed to their relationship in the wake of Diana’s tragic death.

Camilla, Queen Consort, married King Charles on April, 9 2005. The couple had a civil ceremony at Windsor Guildhall, followed by a religious blessing at St George’s Chapel.

Their marriage came many years after the tragic death of Charles’s first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales.

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