Andrew's Memoir Plan: Royal Secrets & #MeToo Victim Claim
Andrew 'plots tell-all memoir as #MeToo victim'

Disgraced Prince Andrew is reportedly considering a multi-million pound tell-all memoir that would expose royal secrets and frame him as a victim of the #MeToo movement, according to new claims.

A Lucrative Deal and a Royal Eviction

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was stripped of his royal titles and military patronages by King Charles in the autumn of 2025. As part of the ongoing effort to distance the monarchy from the scandal surrounding him, the Duke has also agreed to leave his long-term home, the Grade II-listed Royal Lodge near Windsor Castle.

In return for relinquishing the keys to the lavish property he shared with ex-wife Sarah Ferguson, Andrew has been offered alternative accommodation on the King's private Sandringham Estate in Norfolk. Royal biographer Andrew Lownie suggested the monarch acted "ruthlessly" to "lance the boil" of his brother's controversy, noting the move was a "neat solution" as Sandringham is a private holding, not part of the Crown Estate.

Financial Lifeline and a Controversial Narrative

Sources now indicate that the former prince sees a potential book as a way to stabilise his precarious finances. "For Andrew, a book represents both a potential financial lifeline and an opportunity to claim that he has been unjustly handled," a source told OK! Magazine.

The narrative he is alleged to be planning is deeply contentious. Insiders claim Andrew would aim to "paint himself as a victim of the #MeToo and woke movements," despite his widely publicised association with the convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. One source stated he feels "genuinely" like the victim in his downfall, not the actual victims of Epstein's crimes.

Sensitive Secrets and Family Fears

The prospect of such a memoir is said to cause significant anxiety within the Royal Family due to Andrew's insider knowledge. "Andrew knows where the bodies are buried – and that makes the idea of a memoir extraordinarily sensitive," a second source revealed, suggesting it could expose private conversations and long-held secrets.

Prince Andrew has consistently and strenuously denied the allegations made by Virginia Giuffre, who accused him of sexually assaulting her three times when she was a teenager. While sources confirm there is "considerable interest from publishers," no formal book deal has been struck. Furthermore, some observers doubt he would take such a drastic step, with a People magazine source noting that Andrew and Sarah "live and die by the monarchy," making an explosive revelation unlikely.

Whether the Duke will follow his nephew Prince Harry's path and publish remains uncertain, but the potential for a damaging, financially motivated exposé now looms over the House of Windsor.