Prince Harry could benefit from King Charles’s key aide retiring, a royal author has claimed.
The King’s private secretary Clive Alderton is reportedly considering retirement in what could mark a significant shift in palace dynamics.
The potential departure of the 57-year-old Alderton, described as the King’s “all-powerful private secretary and gatekeeper,” would send shockwaves through the Firm.
The timing of this development is particularly notable as the Palace grapples with a major dispute over Prince Andrew’s residence at Royal Lodge.
Prince Harry could benefit from King Charles’s key aide retiring, a royal author has claimed.
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Some of the King’s friends have dubbed the feud with the Duke of York an “un-winnable fiasco”.
Alderton’s departure could potentially reshape the relationship between King Charles and Prince Harry.
In his memoir Spare, Prince Harry notably dubbed Alderton ‘The Wasp’, highlighting the strain between them.
Brown claims that replacing Alderton with someone who doesn’t harbour personal animosity towards Harry could create “a new, friendlier path for negotiations” with the Duke of Sussex.
The King’s private secretary Clive Alderton is reportedly considering retirement in what could mark a significant shift in palace dynamics.
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However, the path to reconciliation remains complex, with some insiders expressing doubt about Harry’s return to royal duties.
The potential staffing change comes at a time when the relationship between the King and his younger son remains distant.
Any potential reconciliation would require Prince William’s approval, according to royal biographer Robert Hardman, who told The Daily Beast that the heir’s “buy-in and consent” would be essential for any meaningful settlement.
Hardman said: “Whatever the King does needs to be done in tandem with both brothers, not just one. He can’t have unilateral discussions if William isn’t in agreement.”
Some insiders have expressed doubt about Prince Harry’s return to royal duties.
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The royal author added: “Whatever reconciliation or bridge-building happens, it needs to be a three-way process. People keep asking about the king’s feelings, but William also has to be on board, which adds complexity.”
Brown argues there remains “a gaping Harry-shaped hole in the depleted royal line-up.”
She wrote: As a veteran of two military tours in Afghanistan and founder of Invictus, the substantive charity that brings hope through competitive sports events for injured vets, the Duke of Sussex, now stripped of his military honours, surely deserved a place on the balcony.
“The British nation needs his human touch and so does his ailing father.”