In recent months, one very diligent palace gopher has been spreading rumors about King Charles’s health, his proximity to Prince Andrew’s Epstein scandals and his inability to change the monarchy in the wake of a global scandal. In case you missed it, Prince William has been on the warpath (from his multiple vacations), trying to make a narrative about his father’s abdication happen. Do I think that King Charles would ever choose to abdicate? No. I do not. He will hold on to that crown with his last breath. But shhh, don’t tell William. He really thinks he can scream and cry and stage-manage his father’s abdication from his fifth forever home. From Rob Shuter’s Substack:
Royal whispers are growing louder that King Charles III will hand the throne to Prince William within the next year — with health cited as the formal and carefully managed explanation. There has been no public announcement, no constitutional motion, no palace confirmation. But multiple sources insist that conversations about succession timing are no longer hypothetical.
One senior courtier tells me: “The transition will look measured and dignified. Health provides the most unassailable explanation.”
The King, insiders say, is determined to control the narrative of his reign’s final chapter. After decades of preparation, he has no intention of appearing pressured or forced. The cautionary shadow remains Andrew and his disastrous association with Jeffrey Epstein, a scandal that dragged the monarchy into sustained damage control.
“Charles will not be seen as pushed,” a palace insider says. “He has waited a lifetime for this role. When he steps back, it will be entirely on his terms.”
Meanwhile, within royal circles, there is growing acknowledgment that William is already functioning as a monarch-in-waiting in everything but title. His steady public presence, diplomatic engagements, and firm approach to family dynamics have quietly reinforced that perception. A longtime aide puts it bluntly: “In many ways, he’s already king unofficially. The institution is preparing emotionally, even if the paperwork hasn’t caught up.”
The strategy, sources suggest, is not dramatic abdication. It is controlled evolution.
And as one former palace adviser concludes: “The monarchy survives because it adapts before it has to. If there’s a handover, it won’t feel like surrender. It will feel inevitable.”
I understand the argument of “Charles could use his very real health problems as an excuse to abdicate.” I understand the argument of “of course they’re succession-planning, that’s just common sense.” What I don’t understand is the argument of “William is already functioning as a monarch-in-waiting in everything but title.” He is not. Throwing his dad under the bus every other day does not make him regent, it makes him immature and short-sighted. Pushing stories about Charles’s death and/or abdication doesn’t make William look more regal or powerful, it makes him look macabre and lazy. And William’s behavior is the reason why I don’t believe Charles would EVER abdicate. Charles has seen his bald-demon son up close for years, Charles fully knows that William is not up for being king. What’s even worse is that everyone in the royal media and royal ecosystem knows it too. Speaking of, this clip has been making the rounds this week. Presented without further comment.
The last time the monarchy underwent a revamp was over a century ago. In 1917 the royal family reinvented themselves as British family institution, rather than a German dynastic one. In order to save itself again, the monarchy will need to reform itself again.
Can William, the… pic.twitter.com/dJYWERQG3G
— Dr. David Starkey CBE (@DrDStarkeyCBE) March 2, 2026

Photos courtesy of Cover Images, Avalon Red.
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Hugo Burnand/Royal Household 2023.
EDITORIAL USE ONLY. This photograph shall not be used after 2259hrs GMT on December 31, 2023, without prior, written permission from Royal Communications. After that date further licensing terms will be available.
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The photographs are being made available by way of licence on condition that: The photographs shall be solely for news editorial use only. The photographs should be used only in the context of Their Majesties’ Coronation. The photograph is provided to you strictly on condition that these conditions and restrictions will apply (and that you will pass these on) to any organisation to whom you supply it. There shall be no commercial use whatsoever of the photograph (including by way of example only) any use in merchandising, advertising or any other non-news editorial use. The photograph must not be digitally enhanced, manipulated or modified in any manner or form.
King Charles III, the Prince of Wales and Prince George on the day of the coronation in the Throne Room at Buckingham Palace, London. The King is pictured in full regalia and is wearing The Robe of Estate, the Imperial State Crown and is holding the Sovereign’s Orb and Sovereign’s Sceptre with Cross. He is seated on one of a pair of 1902 throne chairs that were made for the future King George V and Queen Mary for use at the Coronation of King Edward VII. These throne chairs were also used in the background of the 1937 Coronation of King George VI and Queen Elizabeth and King Charles III and Queen Camilla at Westminster Hall to receive addresses from the S,Image: 775555336, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: PICTURE DESK USE ONLY. HANDOUT. MANDATORY CREDIT: Hugo Burnand EDITORIAL USE ONLY This photograph can not be used after 2259hrs GMT on December 31, 2023, without prior, written permission from Royal Communications., Model Release: no, Credit line: Hugo Burnand/Royal Household 2023/PA Media / Avalon
- 09/02/2026. Diriyah, Saudi Arabia. The Prince of Wales during a private tour of UNESCO World Heritage Site, At-Turaif. The Prince received a private tour of the historical site, led by Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, Crown Prince and Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. His Royal Highness last met the Crown Prince on his inward visit to London in 2018.,Image: 1073489311, License: Rights-managed, Restrictions: © Kensington Palace. This image is free for use but may only be used for news or editorial reporting purposes. This image must NOT be used for any commercial or other use, save for news or editorial reporting and cannot be altered or amended in any manner or form whatsoever. All rights reserved., Model Release: no, Credit line: Andrew Parsons / Kensington Palace/Avalon
- KING’S LYNN, ENGLAND – JUNE 22: HRH Prince William and Catherine, Duchess of Cambridge are greeted by Rose Cholmondeley, the Marchioness of Cholmondeley as they attend a gala dinner in support of East Anglia’s Children’s Hospices’ nook appeal at Houghton Hall on June 22, 2016 in King’s Lynn, England.
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King Charles III wearing the St Edward’s Crown and Queen Camilla wearing the Queen Mary’s Crown during their coronation ceremony in Westminster Abbey, London.
Featuring: Queen Camilla and King Charles III
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 06 May 2023
Credit: PA Images/INSTARimages**NORTH AMERICA RIGHTS ONLY**
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Prince Edward, The Prince of Wales kisses his father King Charles III during his coronation ceremony in Westminster Abbey, London.
Featuring: Prince Edward and King Charles III
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 06 May 2023
Credit: PA Images/INSTARimages**NORTH AMERICA RIGHTS ONLY**
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King Charles III during his coronation at Westminster Abbey, London.
Featuring: King Charles III
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 06 May 2023
Credit: PA Images/INSTARimages**NORTH AMERICA RIGHTS ONLY**
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The British Royal family make an appearence on the balcony of Buckingham Palace after the Coronation
Featuring: King Charles III, Queen Camilla
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 06 May 2023
Credit: Dutch Press Photo/Cover Images**NOT AVAILABLE FOR PUBLICATION IN THE NETHERLANDS OR FRANCE**
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The Prince of Wales attends Earthshot+, at Portside Tower in Cape Town, a day of impactful conversations with world-leading experts aimed at multiplying the impact of The Earthshot Prize, on day two of his visit to South Africa for the fourth annual Earthshot Prize Awards ceremony on November 6
Featuring: William, Prince of Wales
Where: Cape Town, South Africa
When: 05 Nov 2024
Credit: PA Images/INSTARimages**NORTH AMERICA RIGHTS ONLY**
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The Prince of Wales (left) poses for a photograph with the Crown Prince and Prime Minister of the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud on a tour of the Unesco World Heritage Site At-Turaif Diriyah in Diriyah, during his visit to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
Featuring: Prince William, His Royal Highness, Mohammed bin Salman bin Abdulaziz Al Saud, MBS
Where: Diriyah, Saudi Arabia
When: 09 Feb 2026
Credit: Aaron Chown/PA Images/INSTARimages**NORTH AMERICA RIGHTS ONLY**
