
The arrest of Prince Andrew deepens a series of personal and institutional crises challenging King Charles III’s reign, testing the monarchy’s stability.
LONDON: King Charles III is confronting a new and severe test of his reign following the arrest of his brother, Prince Andrew.
Royal commentator Ed Owens told AFP that Charles has been “battered by a succession of difficulties and crises” since ascending the throne in September 2022.
These challenges include estrangement from his son Prince Harry, his own cancer diagnosis, and the illness of Catherine, Princess of Wales.
The arrest of Andrew, however, presents arguably the gravest threat to the monarchy’s moral authority.
Andrew was arrested on suspicion of passing confidential information to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein during his tenure as a UK trade envoy.
This marks the first arrest of a senior British royal in modern history.
In a rare personally signed statement, King Charles vowed the “law must take its course” and expressed his “deepest concern”.
Royal historian Andrew Lownie told AFP this moment represents “a crunch point” for the institution.
He suggested that if the royal family is found to have been “abetting him, enabling him, protecting him, then I think Charles will have to stand aside.”
The scandal has intensified due to Andrew’s long-standing and deeply unpopular association with Epstein.
A 2011 photograph showing Andrew with his arm around Epstein’s main accuser, Virginia Giuffre, proved especially damaging to his reputation.
King Charles had sought to distance the monarchy from the affair by stripping Andrew of his royal titles in October.
New documents released last month by the US Department of Justice, however, reignited public outrage leading to the arrest.
Some commentators have likened the crisis to the 1936 abdication of Edward VIII or the 1997 death of Princess Diana.
Ed Owens noted that restoring stability after such events has historically taken more than a decade.
Academic and royal expert Pauline Maclaran said Charles is partly a victim of timing following Queen Elizabeth II’s 70-year reign.
“The monarchy seems quite unstable now and that was always going to happen after the queen passed away because she had been there for so long,” she said.
Maclaran added that the late queen “certainly protected Andrew”.
Owens was more direct, calling Andrew “an unexploded bomb that the queen passed on to Charles.”
He warned the episode “could potentially be hugely damaging to the institution” and that its moral authority has already suffered.
Restoring that authority will now require visible change, according to analysts.
Maclaran argued that Prince William, the heir apparent, must emphasise his plans for modernisation.
The Sun Malaysia

