Category: Investigative Journalism

  • The New Right’s Antisemitic Agenda to Conquer America

    The New Right’s Antisemitic Agenda to Conquer America

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    Nick Fuentes speaks at a pro-Trump march on 14 November 2020 in Washington DC. © Jacquelyn Martin/AP

    Tucker Carlson leaned forward, his voice a mix of folksy curiosity and barely veiled admiration. “Nick Fuentes, thank you for doing this,” he said, slapping a tin of nicotine pouches onto the scarred wooden table. “I want to understand what you believe, and I want to give you a chance… to just lay it out.” What followed was a two-hour-plus podcast episode that didn’t so much crack open the Overton window of American conservatism as shatter it entirely. Fuentes, the 27-year-old white nationalist firebrand whose “Groyper” army of online trolls has long haunted the fringes of the MAGA movement, wasn’t grilled on his praise for Adolf Hitler or his Holocaust denial. Instead, he was handed a megaphone—reaching nearly 5 million YouTube views in days—and used it to declare “organized Jewry” America’s existential threat, gush over Joseph Stalin as a “fan,” and blame women for the nation’s moral decay.

    This wasn’t a rogue ambush; it was a coronation. For years, Fuentes operated in the shadows—banned from platforms, shunned by CPAC, even mocked by Carlson himself as a “weird little gay kid” in an August spat. But in the wake of Charlie Kirk’s September assassination and a roiling GOP civil war over Israel, the firewall against him is crumbling. From Heritage Foundation boardrooms to Young Republican group chats, Fuentes’ antisemitic gospel is seeping into the mainstream right, threatening to redefine “America First” as a code for white Christian nationalism. As one GOP strategist whispered to me off the record: “Fuentes isn’t infiltrating MAGA—he’s becoming it.”

    Our investigation—drawing on leaked emails, internal Heritage memos, exclusive interviews with disgruntled staffers, and a deep dive into Fuentes’ financial empire—reveals a calculated conquest. Backed by a post-Kirk surge in followers (over 100,000 on X and Rumble since September), Fuentes is positioning himself as the “alt-Charlie Kirk,” infiltrating youth orgs and think tanks while his Groypers wage guerrilla warfare online. The result? A Republican Party fracturing along lines of faith, foreign policy, and outright bigotry, with Trump’s “big tent” looking more like a siege tower aimed at American Jews.

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    Tucker Carlson at the White House on Oct. 14. © Alex Brandon/AP

    The interview, aired October 27 on The Tucker Carlson Show, was billed as a bridge-building exercise. Carlson, exiled from Fox but thriving with 5 million subscribers, framed it as a quest for understanding: “You’re clearly ascendant… enormously talented. More talented than I am, for sure.” Fuentes, the Berwyn, Illinois, native who once urged Trump to drop out in 2016, obliged with a manifesto. “The big challenge to unifying the country… is organized Jewry in America,” he intoned, echoing tropes of a “transnational gang” pulling strings. He admired Stalin for “turning the USSR into a global superpower” and beat back the Nazis—omitting the purges that killed millions, including Jews. On women? “It’s the women… extremely liberal… frumpy, obnoxious, loudmouth… Their sense of their own looks and sexual value is very inflated.” Carlson, self-admitted “a little sexist,” nodded along, decrying “Christian Zionists” like Ted Cruz and Mike Huckabee as heretics infected by a “brain virus.”

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    UNITED STATES – OCTOBER 29: Chairman Ted Cruz, R-Texas, attends the Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee hearing titled “Shut Your App: How Uncle Sam Jawboned Big Tech Into Silencing Americans, Part II,” in Russell building on Wednesday, October 29, 2025. © Tom Williams/CQ Roll Call via AP Images

    Pushback was perfunctory. Carlson quibbled on antisemitism—”It’s against my Christian faith”—but never circled back to Stalin or Hitler, whom Fuentes has called “really f***ing cool.” By contrast, his June grilling of Cruz devolved into shouts over Israel policy. “Why grill a senator fighting for conservatism but pattycake with a podcaster praising genocide?” one Heritage alum fumed to me.

    The episode exploded: 13 million X views, 2.6 million on YouTube in 24 hours. Fuentes crowed on X: “We don’t need permission from foreign agents & paid shills… The Tucker show was the first conversation… totally unsanctioned by Israel.” Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY) rallied: “The more they go after @TuckerCarlson, the more I will watch.” But the backlash was swift and bipartisan.

    GOP Reckoning: From Cruz to McConnell, a Line in the Sand

    At the Republican Jewish Coalition’s (RJC) annual summit in Las Vegas—meant to toast a fragile Gaza ceasefire—the interview hijacked the agenda. College-aged Jewish Republicans waved “Tucker is not MAGA” signs; speakers like Rep. Byron Donalds (R-FL) thundered, “In our party we will not tolerate antisemitism.” Sen. Ted Cruz, without naming Carlson, eviscerated the platforming: “If you sit there with someone who says Adolf Hitler was very, very cool… and you say nothing, then you are a coward and you are complicit in that evil.” He’d seen “more antisemitism on the right in the last six months than in my entire life,” a “poison” facing an “existential crisis.”

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    Sen. Mitch McConnell walks to the Senate Chambers in the U.S. Capitol Building on July 28, 2025 in Washington, DC. © Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images

    Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) piled on, skewering Heritage’s defense of Carlson: “Last I checked, ‘conservatives should feel no obligation’ to carry water for antisemites and apologists for America-hating autocrats.” Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX) called Carlson “a bad person… changed a lot over the last 20 years.” RJC CEO Matt Brooks was “appalled, offended and disgusted,” vowing a “reassessment” of ties with Heritage. Even Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-SC) quipped from the “Hitler-sucks wing of the Republican Party.”

    Democrats pounced: Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer deemed it “deeply disturbing,” urging Heritage allies to “disavow this dangerous mainstreaming.” The irony stung—GOP attacks on “leftist antisemitism” rang hollow amid leaks of Young Republicans’ chats joking about gas chambers and a Trump nominee’s “Nazi streak.”

    Fuentes reveled: In a post-interview video, he urged, “We are done with the Jewish oligarchy… the slavish surrender to Israel.” His Groypers—Pepe the Frog variants co-opted by alt-right incels—swarmed, doxxing critics and claiming infiltration: “There’s groypers in every department.”

    Heritage’s House of Cards: Staff Shakeup and Soul-Searching

    No institution felt the quake like the Heritage Foundation, conservatism’s intellectual fortress and architect of Project 2025. President Kevin Roberts’ Thursday video—defending Carlson as a “close friend” and decrying a “venomous coalition” of cancellers—ignited a firestorm. “The American people expect us to be focusing on our political adversaries on the left, not attacking our friends on the right,” Roberts intoned, adding that “canceling [Fuentes] is not the answer.”

    Internally, it was mutiny. Tax researcher Preston Brashers tweeted a “NAZIS ARE BAD” meme and clips of Fuentes’ Hitler fandom, prompting Chief of Staff Ryan Neuhaus to demand resignations: “Resign if so outraged… addition by subtraction.” By Friday, Roberts reassigned Neuhaus to a senior adviser role at the Simon Center, installing EVP Derrick Morgan as acting chief. An all-staff email, subject: “Heritage’s Stand Against Antisemitism and for Civilizational Truth,” touted anti-hate initiatives but insisted on “balanced” Israel policy: “Space between believing Israel can do no wrong and blaming it for every wrong.”

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    Heritage President Kevin Roberts introduces Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis before a speech at the Heritage Foundation, Oct. 27, 2023, as part of the Mandate for Leadership Series in Washington. © Jess Rapfogel/AP

    Board trustees rebelled. Princeton’s Robert P. George blasted “no enemies to the right” as incompatible with “inherent and equal dignity of all,” refusing to normalize “white supremacists… antisemites.” Trustee John Coleman: “You cannot be a faithful Christian and anti-Semitic.” Mark Goldfeder quit Heritage’s antisemitism task force: “Makes continued participation impossible.” Ex-staffer Tim Chapman, now at Advancing American Freedom, accused Heritage of “if you can’t beat ’em, join ’em” with populists.

    Roberts doubled down in interviews: “To appeal to [Fuentes’] millions of disaffected young men… not to cancel him.” But whispers of a board “emergency meeting” (denied by VP Mary Vought) and donation-page Carlson scrub suggest damage control. “Heritage’s one-voice policy is cracking,” a current staffer told me anonymously. “We’re the intellectual backbone—now we’re carrying water for Stalin fans?”

    Kirk’s September 10 assassination—by Tyler Robinson, a left-leaning gamer radicalized over trans issues—created a void Fuentes exploited ruthlessly. Leftist conspiracies briefly fingered Groypers (debunked; no ties), but Fuentes spun it: “We’re being framed… based on literally zero evidence.” His post-Kirk episode: 2.5 million Rumble views. Spotify yanked his show for hate speech, but X reinstated him under Musk.

    Fuentes’ model? Infiltrate and radicalize. Groypers trolled Turning Point USA in 2019’s “Groyper Wars,” grilling Kirk on Israel and immigration. Jan. 6 arrests included Groyper links; now, they’re in “every department,” per Fuentes. Financially? America First Foundation: $44K in FY2024 (up from $4K prior). Subscriptions ($15-$100/month) and merch fund his Rumble empire—second-most watched Q3 streamer.

    Legally unscathed: A November 2024 battery charge (pepper-spraying a woman after doxxing) resolved with anger management, 75 hours community service, $635 restitution, and an apology—dismissed if complied. Victim Marla Rose: “Consequences for… hate.” Fuentes’ retort to critics? “Shut the f— up. You don’t know what you’re talking about.”

    Fuentes’ Carlson chat doubled as a misogyny manifesto. Women? “Baby machines” with “inflated” value, driving “hoeflation” and erectile dysfunction via porn. “Men are the responsible party but have no authority.” Carlson: “I don’t know a single happily married woman who’s liberal.” Bare Marriage research contradicts: Patriarchal “authority” correlates with exhaustion, pain, and passive-aggression.

    On Israel: A proxy for antisemitism. Carlson’s “Christian Zionists” rant alienates evangelicals; Fuentes eyes Vance as 2028 prey: “We’ll be in Iowa.” Laura Loomer, Jewish MAGA enforcer: “They say I don’t belong… because I’m Jewish.” Trump—philo-Semitic, pro-Israel—holds the tent, but his exit looms.

    As George Washington wrote in 1790: May Jews “continue to merit and enjoy the good will” of Americans. Fuentes’ vision? An America where they don’t. With Kirk gone and Heritage wobbling, the Groypers march. The right’s soul hangs in the balance: Will it debate evil—or embrace it?

  • Chinese and Russian Female Spies Reportedly Use ‘Sex Warfare’ to Target Silicon Valley Secrets

    Chinese and Russian Female Spies Reportedly Use ‘Sex Warfare’ to Target Silicon Valley Secrets

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    SpeakerHub © Aliia Roza

    He thought it was serendipity—a chance encounter at a bustling tech conference in Palo Alto, where amid the hum of venture capitalists and AI demos, she approached him with a disarming smile and probing questions about his startup’s quantum encryption algorithms. She was poised, multilingual, with a LinkedIn profile touting a role at a Shanghai-based venture firm. Over coffee that turned into dinners, then weekends in Napa, she became his confidante, his partner—even his fiancée. It was only after a routine security audit at his firm flagged anomalous data transfers to overseas servers that the truth unraveled: She wasn’t an investor. She was an operative, deployed by Beijing’s Ministry of State Security to burrow into his life and exfiltrate the crown jewels of American innovation.

    This isn’t the plot of a Tom Clancy novel; it’s the stark reality of “sex warfare,” a resurgent espionage tactic where Chinese and Russian intelligence agencies are allegedly weaponizing romance to pilfer Silicon Valley’s secrets. Attractive female operatives—trained in seduction, psychological manipulation, and tech fluency—are infiltrating the Valley’s open ecosystem, seducing engineers, executives, and researchers. In some cases, they’ve gone nuclear: marrying targets, bearing children, and embedding for decades to ensure a steady drip of intellectual property (IP). The economic toll? Up to $600 billion annually in U.S. IP theft, with China fingered as the prime culprit. As one counterintelligence veteran put it, “It’s the Wild West out there.”

    Our investigation, drawing on interviews with former spies, U.S. intelligence officials, and tech security experts, plus declassified FBI reports and recent congressional briefings, reveals a threat that’s not just escalating—it’s evolving. From LinkedIn lures to honeypot marriages, these operations exploit the Valley’s collaborative ethos, where trust is currency and NDAs are as flimsy as a post-hack apology. With Elon Musk quipping on X, “If she’s a 10 and suddenly interested in your boring job, run,” the alarm bells are ringing from Capitol Hill to Sand Hill Road. But as threats spread beyond California to nascent hubs in Austin and Boulder, the question looms: Can America’s tech fortress hold?

    The Honey Trap 2.0: Seduction as a Strategic Asset

    The playbook is as old as Mata Hari, but the targets and stakes have skyrocketed. Since the 1970s, foreign agents have eyed U.S. tech for its golden goose—semiconductors, AI, biotech. But post-Cold War, the game shifted from brute-force hacks to “soft” economic espionage, where human vulnerabilities are the backdoor. Enter “sex warfare”: a term coined by U.S. counterintelligence pros to describe state-sponsored romantic entanglements designed for long-haul intel harvesting.

    James Mulvenon, chief intelligence officer at Pamir Consulting—a firm that schools U.S. companies on China risks—has seen the uptick firsthand. “I’m getting an enormous number of very sophisticated LinkedIn requests from the same type of attractive young Chinese woman,” he told The Times in a bombshell exposé this week. “It really seems to have ramped up recently.” Mulvenon, a 30-year FBI counterspy alum, recounts gatecrashing a Virginia conference on Chinese investment perils: Two poised Chinese women, armed with attendee lists and badges, tried to slip in. “We didn’t let them,” he said. “But they had all the information.”

    It’s not paranoia. A former U.S. counterintelligence officer, speaking anonymously to NDTV, detailed a chilling case: A “beautiful” Russian operative, fresh from a Moscow “soft-power school” and modeling academy, wed an aerospace engineer on a classified drone project. Posing as a crypto analyst, she infiltrated military-space circles. “Showing up, marrying a target, having kids with a target—and conducting a lifelong collection operation—it’s very uncomfortable to think about, but it’s so prevalent,” the officer said. The marriage yielded not just cover, but cover stories: Family outings masked dead drops, bedtime chats doubled as debriefs.

    China’s Ministry of State Security (MSS) and Russia’s SVR (Foreign Intelligence Service) are the maestros. MSS runs “drafting” ops—snapping up stakes in DoD-funded startups to choke U.S. access—while SVR leans on “illegals”: deep-cover agents posing as expats. Both recruit “sparrows,” female agents trained in the KGB’s honeypot arts, now augmented with digital tradecraft. “They have an asymmetric advantage,” Mulvenon warns. “U.S. culture and laws tie our hands in countermeasures.”

    Even allies play. South Korea and Israel have been caught quietly hoovering intel at Valley mixers, per declassified docs. But Beijing and Moscow dominate: FBI stats show China-linked IP theft hit 80% of cases in 2024, up from 60% in 2020.

    Confessions from the Shadows: Ex-Spies Spill the Secrets

    To understand the machinery, we turn to defectors. Aliia Roza, a 45-year-old Kazakh-Tatar émigré now training “seduction for self-esteem” in the U.S., broke her silence on iHeart’s To Die For podcast this year. Born to a Soviet general, Roza was funneled into a KGB successor program at 18, plucked from 350 cadets for “sexpionage” training. “We weren’t just seducing—we were mastering communication,” she told host Neil Strauss. “Dress, makeup, how to make targets believe you’re their soulmate.”

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    Her lavish lifestyle is a far cry from the ‘corrupt’ regime in the Russian military
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    She now lives in a $20 million mansion in Beverly Hills with her 11-year-old son.

    Pay? A measly $100 monthly for six-day weeks of martial arts and psyops drills. But the rush? “At the end of the day, when I saved someone’s life [by extracting intel], I felt good,” Roza recalled. She balanced missions with motherhood, but the toll mounted. “I saw these other female agents hit 56—miserable, lonely. No private lives, no families.” Brainwashed as a “master manipulator,” Roza fled Moscow over two decades ago with her son, resurfacing on Instagram with 1M+ followers peddling empowerment tips. “It’s not just sex—it’s the art of making them believe,” she says now. Her story, echoed in Fox News Digital interviews, underscores the human wreckage: Agents discarded like spent cartridges.

    Then there’s Anna Chapman, the flame-haired “Black Widow” whose 2010 FBI bust—Operation Ghost Stories—exposed a Russian sleeper ring in New York. Deported in a spy swap that freed poison victim Sergei Skripal, Chapman, now 43 and rebranded Anna Romanova, has pivoted to propaganda. This month, Putin tapped her to helm the SVR’s shiny new Museum of Russian Intelligence near Moscow’s Gorky Park—a hall of mirrors celebrating espionage “achievements.”

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    Ousted Russian Spy Anna Chapman Is Now a Trump-Loving Instagram Star. © David Azia/A.P.

    In her 2024 memoir BondiAnna: To Russia with Love, Chapman gloats: “Nature endowed me with a slim waist, full chest, cascade of red hair… I didn’t try too hard to please. And it worked like magic.” From London hedge funds (nabbed via strip poker, she claims) to Manhattan real estate fronts beaming secrets via laptop, her toolkit was charm laced with code. Post-deportation, she’s a pro-Kremlin TV star and mom, but her museum gig signals SVR’s unrepentant flex. “It’s history in the making,” SVR chief Sergey Naryshkin purred at the unveiling, per The Sun.

    Silicon Valley isn’t just code—it’s a $1.8 trillion GDP engine, per 2025 CBRE data. But espionage is a silent tax. IP theft siphons $225-600B yearly, fueling China’s “Made in 2025” push to dominate AI and EVs. Startups, hungry for funding, pitch to Chinese VCs at U.S.-hosted contests—only to watch prototypes vanish overnight. “Share your plan, lose your edge—or relocate to Shenzhen,” warns Jeff Stoff, ex-NSA analyst.

    Take the unnamed tech giant from our lead: In 2024, its security team swept in amid vanishing files—millions in R&D poached, traced to a VP’s “fiancée.” Or the aerospace case: Russian-sourced drone specs allegedly fast-tracked Moscow’s hypersonic program, costing Raytheon $2B in lost contracts.

    Broader ripples? Venture funding dipped 15% in Q3 2025, per PitchBook, as firms mandate “espionage audits.” NVIDIA stock wobbled 3% post a leaked chip blueprint tied to a “romantic entanglement.” Musk’s X post amplified the chill: “Silicon Valley sex warfare? If she’s a 10, she’s probably a 10 on the MSS payroll.” Even allies fret: UK’s MI5 flagged similar ops targeting Cambridge quantum labs.

    It’s not confined to hoodies and hackathons. China’s ops span political infiltration—recruiting Cali pols via units like the one exposed in Politico‘s Rose Pak saga, where SF’s power broker funneled influence to Beijing. Recall the 2008 Torch Run: MSS mobilized 10,000 U.S. students to quash protests, per FBI memos.

    Russia’s post-2017 consulate closure? No sweat—proxies via crypto bros and VC scouts. “Oklahoma land rush,” quips a DNI report: A frenzy for biotech in Boston, autonomy tech in Detroit.

    As hubs sprout—Boulder’s quantum corridor, Austin’s chip fabs—vulnerabilities multiply. Underreporting plagues: 70% of breaches go dark, per Verizon’s 2025 DBIR, fearing spooks or stigma.

    FBI’s upping ante: Operation Honeyguard trains agents in reverse honeypots, while CISA pushes “trust but verify” for execs—backgrounds, alibis, even polygraphs for fiancées. Congress eyes the Espionage Modernization Act, mandating disclosures for foreign ties.

    But experts like Mulvenon caution: “The Valley’s openness is our superpower—and Achilles’ heel.” Roza, from her L.A. studio, urges empathy: “These women are tools, too. Break the cycle by seeing the human cost.”

    In a firewall of flirtations, Silicon Valley’s innovators must armor up. The next pitch? Vet the pitcher. Because in sex warfare, love’s the Trojan horse.

  • Prince Andrew Should Move Out of Royal Lodge, Says Robert Jenrick

    Prince Andrew Should Move Out of Royal Lodge, Says Robert Jenrick

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    Prince Andrew (pictured in April 2025) has reportedly not paid any rent on the property for the last two decades. © Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images

    In the shadow of Windsor Great Park’s ancient oaks, Royal Lodge stands as a Georgian jewel—a sprawling 30-room mansion once beloved by queens and now at the epicenter of a brewing royal scandal. For more than two decades, Prince Andrew, the disgraced Duke of York, has called this Grade II-listed estate home, sharing its opulent halls with his ex-wife, Sarah Ferguson. But a bombshell lease document, unearthed and scrutinized this week, has ignited bipartisan outrage: Andrew hasn’t paid a penny in rent since 2003. Instead, he’s handed over a symbolic “peppercorn” annually—if demanded at all—while taxpayers foot the bill for lost revenue estimated at over £5 million.

    The revelations, first detailed by The Times and corroborated by the Crown Estate’s own records, come amid fresh waves of scrutiny over Andrew’s ties to convicted sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein. Just days after Andrew relinquished his Duke of York title and military honors—moves seen by some as a desperate bid to salvage his fading royal status—Virginia Giuffre’s posthumous memoir Nobody’s Girl hit bookshelves, reigniting allegations of sexual abuse that Andrew has vehemently denied for years. Politicians from across the spectrum are now demanding answers, investigations, and even eviction. “The public are sick of him,” thundered Shadow Justice Secretary Robert Jenrick on BBC Radio 4’s Today programme. “It’s about time Prince Andrew took himself off to live in private and make his own way in life.”

    This is no mere tabloid tittle-tattle; it’s a flashpoint for broader questions about royal privilege in an era of austerity. As King Charles III navigates a slimmed-down monarchy, the optics of his brother’s taxpayer-subsidized luxury are toxic. With parliamentary committees gearing up for probes and campaigners calling for compensation, Andrew’s grip on Royal Lodge—secured by a 75-year lease running until 2078—may finally be loosening. But as our investigation reveals, evicting him could cost the public purse dearly, thanks to a little-known compensation clause buried in the contract.

    The Peppercorn Deal: A Royal Bargain or a Public Slight?

    The story begins in the balmy summer of 2003, when Prince Andrew, then a roving trade envoy with a penchant for high-flying diplomacy (and higher-flying controversies), inked a deal that would secure his family’s foothold in Windsor’s gilded enclave. Fresh from Sunninghill Park—another grace-and-favor gift from his mother, the late Queen Elizabeth II—Andrew shelled out £1 million upfront for a 75-year lease on Royal Lodge. In return, he committed to a staggering £7.5 million refurbishment, transforming the then-weathered estate into a modern palace fit for a fallen prince.

    But here’s the kicker: since those initial outlays, Andrew’s annual rent has amounted to precisely nothing. The lease stipulates “one peppercorn (if demanded)” per year—a legal relic from feudal times, symbolizing nominal payment without actual cash changing hands. Market estimates peg the property’s true rental value at £260,000 annually, meaning the Crown Estate—whose profits flow directly to the Treasury—has foregone millions in potential revenue. Andrew, in exchange, shoulders all maintenance costs, a burden that reportedly runs into hundreds of thousands yearly for the 98-acre grounds alone.

     

    The Crown Estate, an independent body managing £15 billion in royal assets, defends the arrangement as standard for historic properties requiring “close management control.” A 2005 National Audit Office (NAO) report, commissioned post-refurbishment, deemed it “appropriate,” noting that without Andrew’s investment, taxpayers would have footed the renovation bill. Downing Street echoed this on Tuesday, with a No. 10 spokesman insisting: “An independent evaluation concluded that the transaction… was appropriate.”

    Yet critics smell favoritism. The NAO report itself conceded that the “over-riding need” for royal oversight “constrained the Crown Estate’s ability to realise the highest market value.” And lurking in the fine print? A compensation clause: If Andrew surrenders the lease early, the Crown Estate must pay him £558,000—equivalent to £185,865 annually until 2028. Eviction, it seems, isn’t just politically fraught; it’s financially punitive.

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    Royal Lodge in Windsor, pictured in 1937, has been a royal home since the mid-17th century Heritage. © Images/Getty Images

    Political Firestorm: ‘Disgraceful’ Subsidy or Sovereign Right?

    The lease’s exposure has supercharged a cross-party backlash. Robert Jenrick, the Conservative shadow justice secretary, didn’t mince words on Today: “He has disgraced himself, he has embarrassed the royal family time and again. I don’t see why the taxpayer, frankly, should continue to foot the bill at all.” Jenrick, a vocal monarchist who has praised King Charles’s “great respect and admiration” for handling the crisis, argued Andrew should “vanish from public life” entirely—no more luxury pads on the public dime.

    Labour’s Dame Meg Hillier, chair of the Commons Treasury Committee and a 20-year MP veteran, signaled parliamentary muscle: “Where money flows, particularly where taxpayers’ money is involved… Parliament has a responsibility to have a light shine upon that, and we need to have answers.” Her Public Accounts Committee counterpart is poised to join a joint scrutiny, potentially hauling Crown Estate executives before MPs by year’s end.

    The Liberal Democrats, ever the fiscal watchdogs, went further. Cabinet Office spokeswoman Lisa Smart demanded Andrew “show some contrition by returning every penny of rent that he’s not paid while disgracing his office.” “Andrew has failed our King and Royal Family and betrayed the values of the British people,” she added, framing the saga as an “insult” to public decency.

    Even as voices unite against Andrew, the palace remains tight-lipped. Buckingham Palace sources, speaking anonymously to the BBC, admitted “more days of pain ahead” but insisted the lease is a private matter. King Charles, who slashed Andrew’s £1 million annual allowance last year and yanked his £3 million security detail, is reportedly “at the end of his tether,” per royal insiders. Yet Andrew digs in, buoyed by his “cast-iron” contract and a personal fortune estimated at £1.5 million—bolstered by the controversial £15 million sale of Sunninghill Park in 2007 to a Kazakh oligarch’s son-in-law.

    Shadows of Epstein: Giuffre’s Ghost and Unfinished Reckonings

    No discussion of Andrew’s woes is complete without revisiting the Epstein specter. The financier’s 2019 suicide left a trail of shattered lives, with Andrew at its painful nexus. Giuffre, who died by suicide in April 2025 at 41, accused Andrew of sexually abusing her three times as a 17-year-old—once in London, once in New York, and once on Epstein’s Little St. James island. Andrew settled her 2022 civil suit for an undisclosed sum (rumored at £12 million) but never admitted liability.

    Nobody’s Girl, co-written by Amy Wallace and published posthumously per Giuffre’s wishes, peels back layers of trauma. Extracts in The Guardian describe Giuffre’s recruitment at Mar-a-Lago: “An apex predator… spotted me like fresh meat.” Wallace, in ITV News interviews, defended Giuffre’s hazy timelines—”I may not remember particular dates… but I remember that face”—and lambasted Andrew’s inaction: “He was in the houses, he was on the jets… he could come forward and help investigators.” She hailed his title surrender as a “victory,” a “step in the right direction” toward accountability, though “his life is being eroded… as it should be.”

    The memoir’s timing—mere days after Andrew’s title drop—has amplified calls for justice. Giuffre’s brother and sister-in-law, Sky and Amanda Roberts, urged Channel 4 News to press the Metropolitan Police to reopen its probe, or failing that, involve the Independent Office for Police Conduct. “Virginia wanted all the men… held to account,” Wallace told BBC Newsnight. Ghislaine Maxwell, Epstein’s convicted procurer, emerges as the “more ghastly” villain—a woman who “used her gender to lure young girls into this den of hell.”

    Andrew’s denials persist: “I have never intended to… meet Virginia Giuffre,” he stated post-settlement. But emails unearthed in U.S. court filings show post-2001 contact with Epstein, contradicting his infamous 2019 Newsnight claim of a clean break. Ferguson, too, faces fallout—stripped of seven patronages after a groveling Epstein email surfaced.

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    The then Princess Elizabeth and her sister, Princess Margaret, pulling a lawn chair on wheels at the back of Royal Lodge in April 1940. © Lisa Sheridan/Getty Images

    A Storied Seat: From Queen Mother’s Haven to Andrew’s Holdout

    Royal Lodge’s history mirrors the monarchy’s own: humble origins as a 17th-century farmhouse, rebuilt in 1830 by King William IV as a hunting retreat for George IV. By the 1930s, it became a sanctuary for the abdication-scarred House of Windsor. King George VI and Queen Elizabeth (the Queen Mother) raised their daughters there, Elizabeth II frolicking in her gift “Wendy House”—Y Bwthyn Bach, a thatched play cottage still on the grounds.

    The Queen Mother held court until her 2002 death at 101, overseeing lavish updates. Andrew’s 2003 arrival marked a shift: He, Ferguson, and daughters Beatrice and Eugenie transformed it into York family HQ. Interiors boast seven bedrooms, a grand saloon, and a private chapel amid manicured gardens. Yet whispers of a “secret palace” in Abu Dhabi—rumored as an Andrew bolt-hole—add intrigue, with Daily Mail investigations probing Gulf ties.

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    The Queen Mother, King George VI, Princess Margaret and Princess Elizabeth at home with their dogs at Royal Lodge in June 1936. © Lisa Sheridan/Getty Images

    Andrew’s finances remain opaque. With his allowance axed, he leans on a £20,000 naval pension, Pitch@Palace residuals (now suspended), and opaque Gulf/Chinese ventures. The Sunninghill windfall endures scrutiny for its £3 million markup and buyer’s Kazakh links. Security? Self-funded at £3 million yearly, per palace edict.

    But the real sting is opportunity cost. Over 22 years, forgone rent could have swelled Treasury coffers by £5.7 million—enough for 1,000 NHS nurse salaries or climate adaptation projects. As Jenrick put it: “He shouldn’t have any taxpayer subsidies going forward.”

    As autumn leaves carpet Windsor’s paths, Royal Lodge’s future hangs in balance. Andrew, 65 and isolated, shows no sign of budging—his lease a fortress against familial pleas. Yet with Giuffre’s words echoing (“This is about a system of powerful… people hurting people who aren’t”), and MPs sharpening their quills, the pressure is unrelenting.

    King Charles, ever the modernizer, faces a dilemma: Enforce eviction and risk a £558,000 payout, or let the “embarrassment” linger? For taxpayers weary of royal excess, the verdict is clear: Time’s up for the Peppercorn Prince. As Wallace warns, the “fetishisation of young girls” didn’t die with Epstein—nor, it seems, has Andrew’s unyielding grip on privilege.