In August, letters were sent to Her Majesty and the other members of the royal family expressing concern over the Duke of York’s friendship with Rowland. The Queen and Prince Philip’s third child was recently accused of exploiting his taxpayer-funded role as Britain’s trade envoy for 10 years to further his financial interests. However, the Queen and her advisers didn’t take the warning seriously, and they opted to not take any action against it. Just last month, the Queen allowed Prince Andrew to carry on with his royal duties as normal. The dad of two was also given the honor of taking the salute from 10,000 veterans at the Horse Guards Parade on Remembrance Sunday.
But a spokesperson for the palace told Express that all sorts of letters are sent to the Queen. However, they never respond to every single one of them. Meanwhile, the Queen also made headlines today after she spotted seemingly scolding Princess Anne during their meeting with President Donald Trump and Melania Trump. During their meeting at Buckingham Palace, the Queen is spotted shaking hands and chatting with the Trumps while standing beside Prince Charles, Camilla Parker Bowles, and the Secretary-General of North Atlantic Treaty Organization Jens Stoltenberg. Princess Anne didn’t join the Trumps immediately, which forced the Queen to gesture for her to come closer. But instead of following Her Majesty’s orders discreetly, Princess Royal reacted negatively by raising both of her hands in the air.
Prince Charles, Camilla, FLOTUS, and POTUS all looked at her and Princess Anne suddenly laughed nervously. Princess Royal is known for being stubborn. In the documentary “The Real Princess Anne,” the narrator said that Princess Anne’s stubbornness became a form of heroism during her failed kidnapping decades ago. “The gunman was hoping to collect a ransom of £3million but Anne thwarted his plan by refusing point-blank to get out of the car. He fired nine shots, but none at her, and her characteristic stubbornness became a form of heroism,” the narrator said.