Downing Street today offered robust support to Prince Andrew amid calls for him to resign as Britain’s trade envoy over his relationships with several controversial figures, including a convicted paedophile.
Business Secretary Vince Cable sparked speculation over the Duke of York’s future when he said this morning that “conversations” would be taking place with him and it would be for him to judge whether he should stay on in the role.
But Mr Cameron’s official spokesman said the prime minister had full confidence in Andrew as trade envoy and was “fully supportive” of him staying on. The spokesman stressed that the government is not reviewing the Duke’s voluntary position, which he has held since 2001.
Fresh doubts have been raised about Andrew’s position in the wake of further media coverage over the weekend about his links with US billionaire Jeffrey Epstein, who was sentenced to 18 months in prison in 2008 for soliciting a minor for prostitution.
He has also faced criticism for entertaining the son-in-law of ousted Tunisian president Zine El Abidine Ben Ali at Buckingham Palace.
There was also criticism of his alleged links to Libyan leader Muammar Gadafy's son Saif al-Islam.
Andrew has known Epstein (58), since the early 1990s, and met him as recently as December in New York.
The financier was accused of sex offences by a number of underage girls and sentenced to 18 months in prison in 2008 for soliciting a minor for prostitution.
Media reports quoted an unnamed government source as saying there would not be “many tears shed” if Andrew quit, and the BBC this morning said a Downing Street source had conceded one more serious story could make his role untenable.
Despite the mounting criticism, it was business as usual for Andrew, who spent the morning visiting a school in East London in his role as patron of the organisation Young Engineers. He made no response to shouted questions from reporters about his future.
Mr Cable, who as President of the Board of Trade is responsible for trade promotion, stressed that it was not up to ministers to drop the Duke. "He is not a government appointee. He is not somebody who is appointed and sacked," he told BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
Mr Cable added that he had no criticism of the way Andrew had carried out his responsibilities as trade envoy and that business had found him “supportive and helpful”.
However, Labour former Foreign Office minister Chris Bryant said it was time for him to go. “I think we should be dispensing with his services. I think the charge list now against him is so long that he is a bit of an embarrassment,” Mr Bryant told Today. “I just can’t imagine the next time it is proposed that he goes to a foreign country what the ambassador would think.”
And senior Labour backbencher Mike Gapes, a member and former chairman of the Commons Foreign Affairs Committee, said Andrew’s position was “untenable”.
The Duke has been the UK’s Special Representative for International Trade and Investment since 2001, travelling around the world and at home promoting Britain’s business interests.
Andrew, who divorced former wife Sarah Ferguson in 1996, has had a difficult relationship with the media for many years. Newspapers have regularly criticised him for his "playboy" lifestyle, printing photographs of him cavorting on yachts or sunbathing surrounded by topless women.
His private secretary, Alastair Watson, in a letter published in the London Times newspaper last week, said: "There has been widespread comment on the Duke's relationship with Epstein. "The Duke has known Mr Epstein since being introduced to him in the early 1990s. The insinuations and innuendos that have been made in relation to the Duke are without foundation."
Mr Watson also confirmed that, as part of his trade role, Andrew had met Colonel Gadafy’s son Saif in Libya on two occasions in 2007. Saif Gadafy was “not a friend” of the Duke, Mr Watson added.
Agencies