Philippine senate convenes as impeachment court to try vice president as political storm rages

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The Philippine Senate convened an impeachment court Monday for the trial ofVice President Sara Duterteover criminal charges, in a time of deep divisions that erupted into anexchange of gunfirelast week in the chamber.

Associated Press

The House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly to impeach Duterte last Monday over alleged unexplained wealth, misuse of state funds and a public threat to have thepresident assassinatedif she herself were killed due to their political disputes.

The vice president, who has announced her plan toseek the presidencyin 2028, has denied the charges but has refused to answer the allegations in detail.

Her father,former President Rodrigo Duterte,has been detained by the International Criminal Court on charges of crimes against humanity. The charges stem from anti-drugs crackdowns he ordered while in power that killed thousands of mostly petty suspects.

Ahead of the impeachment trial, 13 of 24 senators led by allies of the Dutertes suddenly wrested the presidency of the Senate last Monday, leaving the outcome of the trial in question.

The vice president has blamed President Ferdinand Marcos Jr., her former ally and running mate in the 2022 election, for “kidnapping” her ailing father, referring to his arrest and transfer to the international court in The Hague last March.

Advertisement

The escalating disputes between the country’s two top leaders reflectthe deep divisionsthat have long plagued the rambunctious Asian democracy.

One of the senators, Ronald dela Rosa, served as Rodrigo Duterte’s national police chief and enforced his bloody crackdowns on illegal drugs. The ICC has named dela Rosa as a co-conspirator and unsealed awarrant for his arrestlast Monday.

That same day, Dela Rosa, who was absent from the Senate for months for fear of arrest, suddenly showed up in the chamber to enable Sen. Alan Peter Cayetano, a key ally of the Dutertes, to gain a slim majority and capture the Senate presidency.

Dela Rosa told reporters he came out of hiding and went to the Senate using Cayetano’s van but was nearly arrested by National Bureau of Investigation agents. He dashed into a stairway and ran to the Senate plenary hall, where Cayetano and other allies placed him under the chamber’s “protective custody.”

A tense standoff between the Senate’s security personnel and government agents positioned in an adjacent government building escalated into an exchange of fire Wednesday night with the Senate personnel firing what their chief, Mao Aplasca, said were warning shots. Marcos appealed to the public to remain calm in a late-night call on national TV.

Cayetano later said that dela Rosa haddisappearedfrom the Senate. Authorities said they were investigating the possibility that the exchange of fire may have been instigated to enable dela Rosa's escape.

Philippine senate convenes as impeachment court to try vice president as political storm rages

MANILA, Philippines (AP) — The Philippine Senate convened an impeachment court Monday for the trial ofVice President Sara Duterteover c...
Kylie Minogue reveals love of her life

Kylie Minogue has always attracted intense scrutiny over her romantic life amid a slew of high-profile relationships.

The Telegraph Kylie Minogue

The 57-year-old multi-award-winning Australian pop star is currently single, after revealing in 2024 that she was “enjoying this freedom”.

However, her exes include former Neighbours co-star, Jason Donovan, INXS frontman Michael Hutchence, French actorOlivier Martinez, American singerLenny Kravitz, British actorJoshua Sasse, and Spanish modelAndrés Velencoso.

When asked whether the late Hutchence, the Australian singer-songwriter whom she dated from 1989 to 1991, was the love of her life, she told the Sunday Times’ Style Magazine: “Yes, probably. I’ve had lots of relationships, some were love, some were not. My relationship with him, or our relationship at the time, was not for that long, but it had a profound effect on me.”

Hutchencetook his own lifein 1997, aged 37. Minogue was just 21 years old when she met him at an INXS after-party in 1989, shortly after she had ended her three-year relationship withDonovan.

She has said in previous interviews that her relationship with Hutchence was formative for her young adult years.

Kylie Minogue and Michael Hutchence

When they first met, he told her: “I don’t know what we should do first, have lunch or have sex.” The actor said she was both intrigued and scared by his bold claim and their instant chemistry.

In a 2014 interview with Current Affair, Minogue added of their encounter: “He did ask to kiss me numerous times and I did say no numerous times.”

She made the comments about Hutchence ahead of an forthcomingNetflix documentaryabout her life, entitled, Kylie.

Advertisement

“We went on this beautiful journey of a relationship,” she told the programme. “His passing in 1997 was a loss to so many, including myself,” she continued. “People wonder why I’m still so moved... it’s for many reasons. One of those is that he was one of my first big steps into adulthood, into the wider world.

“A world of possibility and discovery. Travel, literature, excess, connections, art, artistry, expression, performance, and on and on the list goes!” she added. “I was the perfect age for that moment.”

The singer had just come out of a three-year relationship with Neighbours co-star Jason Donovan when she met the INXS singer

Minogue also confirmed in TheSunday Timesinterview that she does not currently have a boyfriend. She said: “I was in a relationship and when that ended I realised I was OK on my own. I’m definitely getting pickier.”

In the 2019 documentary Mystify: Michael Hutchence, she described the INXS star as “a dark, bad boy” and herself as “the pure, good girl”.

She added that he was a “sensual” person who awakened that in her too: “Sex, love, food, drugs, music, travel, books, you name it, he wanted to experience it,” she said. “As his partner, I got to experience a lot of that as well. If you’re a sensual being, all of your senses need stimulation. He definitely awakened my desire for things in my world.”

Minogue dated American singer Lenny Kravitz after her relationship with Hutchence collapsed

In the same documentary, Minogue opened up about their split, admitting she could not remember why they ended things: “Was it work, was it the drugs? I don’t know. He was like a broken man,” she said.

“He was on all fours on the floor crying. I didn’t know what to do, I didn’t know what was happening. I just know he was a broken man. I’d never seen any man like that before. I left pretty confounded and destroyed, and knew that was it. He broke my heart. I have to confess that the hurt stayed for quite a long time.”

Hutchence went on to date modelHelena Christensenand the presenterPaula Yates, with whom he shared a daughter, Heavenly Hiraani Tiger Lily Hutchence.

He died by suicide a year after his daughter’s birth and Minogue attended his funeral, which took place in Sydney.

Kylie Minogue reveals love of her life

Kylie Minogue has always attracted intense scrutiny over her romantic life amid a slew of high-profile relationships. The 57-year...
What on earth was John Travolta thinking with this dreadful vanity project?

It is normal to be bored by dreadful films, or even annoyed by them. But I don’t believe I have ever felt as sorry for one as I doJohn Travolta’s directorial debut, the viewing of which is like watching a toddler walk into a lamp post.

The Telegraph John Travolta at Cannes Film Festival with his daughter Ella Bleu Travolta, who stars in his film Propeller One-Way

Travolta has adapted his 1997 children’s novel which recounts one of the actor’s formative experiences: an overnight multi-stop flight he took with his mother from New York to Los Angeles in December 1962, and from which his lifelong love of aviation presumably sprung. From the awful title font on,Propeller One-Way Night Coachis extraordinarily bad – though the making of it also clearly means a lot to Travolta, who gets to relive and share this happy passage of his childhood with the world at large. Is it a film for children? Families? Vintage plane-spotters? One suspects it is in fact a film made for the amusement of one person only, who also happens to be the person making it.

Clark Shotwell plays the youngTravolta, here called Jeff, and Kelly Eviston-Quinnett his mother Helen: meanwhile Travolta himself performs the narration, in which an older Jeff recalls the trip in often punishing detail. At best, the voice-over is wistful if meandering; at worst it keeps zig-zagging off into gibberish. Memorable passages include Jeff referring to the Holocaust (which, astoundingly, comes up twice) as “The Nazi event”, as well as the following reaction to seeing a toy aeroplane in the Trans World Airlines souvenir shop: “Life at this moment was so good that it was just hard to recover from.”

Advertisement

There are would-be-comic asides about smoking and the cockpit door being left unlocked, encounters with some eccentric fellow passengers, as well as lots of lingering shots of lavish in-flight catering, including glistening inch-thick slices of chateaubriand carved on the trolley, and an odd running joke about chicken cordon bleu. The young Jeff is of course also bewitched by the air hostesses – one of whom, Doris, is played by Ella Bleu Travolta, the director’s daughter.

Travolta appears towards the end of the film as one of the pilots

Another (Olga Hoffman) takes such a shine to the little tyke and his mother that she upgrades them both to first class, gratis, before having them transferred onto an even more glamorous Boeing 707 jet for the last leg of the trip. This is the sort of exhilarating dramaPropeller One-Way Night Coachkeeps throwing at you: someone is lovely to young Jeff, and then the old Jeff rambles for a bit about how great it was. We keep hearing that life simply can’t get any better, then Doris lets him lie down in one of the first class beds for a bit and lo, a new existential pinnacle is somehow reached.

The film’s heavy-handedly naive tone does create some interesting effects: there is a jolt of surrealist horror towards the end when Travolta makes a twinkling on-screen cameo as the 707’s pilot, only to start talking in exactly the same voice – tone, tempo and all – as eight-year-old Jeff’s internal monologue. Then after 60 minutes it’s suddenly over, at which point you’re just grateful the two didn’t book a return ticket.

Screening at Cannes Film Festival. On Apple TV from May 29

What on earth was John Travolta thinking with this dreadful vanity project?

It is normal to be bored by dreadful films, or even annoyed by them. But I don’t believe I have ever felt as sorry for one as I doJohn ...
Will Ferrell pranks 'SNL' viewers with Chad Smith in opening monologue

Will Ferrellis live from New York once again.

USA TODAY

The "Saturday Night Live" alum returned to the sketch show for theSeason 51 finaleon May 16, marking his sixth time serving as host.

After kicking off the show bystarring as Jeffrey Epstein's ghost, who reunited withPresident Trump(James Austin Johnson) in the cold open, Ferrell played a bit of a prank on viewers by havingRed Hot Chili Peppersdrummer Chad Smith walk out as him for the opening monologue.

Smith began by speaking as if he were Ferrell, saying he was "a cast member here for seven years, and now, I'm hosting for the sixth time! Amazing! It really feels like coming home."

'SNL' cold open:Will Ferrell's Jeffrey Epstein visits 'best friend' Donald Trump

But the "Anchorman" star soon rushed to the stage, dressed in the exact same suit that Smith was wearing. "He pushed me down backstage and I fell, hard," Ferrell said. "Lorne (Michaels) had to give me mouth-to-mouth!"

Fully committing to the bit, this premise essentially took over Ferrell's entire monologue, as the comedian then acted like he was too thrown off by what happened to get back into the groove.

Advertisement

The night's musical guest,Paul McCartney, also got involved. The Beatles legend was sitting in the audience and had a question to ask Ferrell: "What do you think you're doing, Chad?"

Colin Jost, Michael Che shock:New 'SNL' Weekend Update joke swap

Paul McCartney, Will Ferrell and Marcello Hernández in a promotional spot for

This was the first time Ferrell has hosted "SNL" since 2019. He was previously a cast member on the show from 1995 to 2002, famously portraying George W. Bush.

The "SNL" season finale also featured the surprise return of another alum. In a sketch where Ferrell played a drama teachercasting a school musical, former "SNL" cast memberMolly Shannonpopped up as a hilariously overdramatic choir teacher. Ferrell previouslystarred in a version of this sketchthat was cut for time in 2019.

Near the end of the night, Ferrell also bared all in asketch about a manwho goes to visit his girlfriend's parents and finds that their backsides are entirely exposed when they turn around.

Ferrell's episode was the show's last before its annual summer hiatus. "SNL" will return with a new season in the fall.

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Will Ferrell returns to 'SNL' with Chad Smith, Molly Shannon

Will Ferrell pranks 'SNL' viewers with Chad Smith in opening monologue

Will Ferrellis live from New York once again. The "Saturday Night Live" alum returned to the sketch show for theSeason 5...
Andrew Lownie interview: Andrew is still not sorry

The historian Andrew Lownie looks in pretty fine fettle for a 64-year-old man with an absolutely brutal work regimen. His day job, he reminds me as we meet in his unexpectedly plain sitting room in Westminster, is as a literary agent. But he is now possibly better known for his side-hustle as a biographer; most recently he producedEntitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York, an explosive and meticulously researched book on Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor and his ex-wife, Sarah Ferguson.

The Telegraph Andrew Lownie, pictured at his Westminster townhouse for The Telegraph

Lownie says he wrote the book, which has just been updated for itsforthcoming paperback edition, around his agenting duties, which meant lots of early mornings, evenings and weekends, plus the odd snatched day off for important interviews.

“Fergie’s actually sat in that seat,” he says, pointing to the small leather armchair I’ve just settled into. He is dressed in a suit and tie (he’s not a man easy to imagine in jeans); beside us on the mantelpiece are works of art – and a rather plaintive commemorative mug from Andrew and Fergie’s wedding, in 1986. When he was working on the book, he says, he invited the former duchess to meet him – and she came by, seemingly in an effort to nudge the biography in a more positive direction. In that, as in many things, Fergie failed.

Andrew and Sarah Ferguson at Ascot, 2019

Was it strange, finding the woman he had uncovered so much about, suddenly in his house? “Yes,” Lownie says. He alleges several eye-watering details about Fergie in the book: that she frequently failed to pay her staff, that she continued to associate with Jeffrey Epstein years after publicly disowning him, that she once spent £25,000 in a single hour at Bloomingdale’s. Even so, Lownie airily admits, he was “charmed by her. You know, she’s very charismatic. She’s like a Labrador, a bundle of energy. These are the two sides to her.”

Around us is some of the evidence of Lownie’s industry: scruffy boxes filled with Freedom of Information requests, tome after tome about the Royal family, acres of press cuttings. Lownie used, he says, only around 10 per cent of the material he collected. It took him two years just to read it all and to compose a list of names to approach, which eventually numbered some 3,000 people. Of those, just 300 agreed to speak to him – “but”, he points out, “that’s probably about 250 more than most books”.

Andrew’s ‘possible sexual assault’

Many in the publishing world admire Lownie’s completionism, his Pied Piper ability to coax apparently slight but telling anecdotes from an extraordinary range of sources. One of many marmalade droppers in the new edition ofEntitledare comments from an armed police officer who used to work at Heathrow, and who recalls Andrew meeting a British Airways crew member on a plane, spinning her around when she tried to shake his hand and bending her forward “so that his groin was clearly and firmly in contact with her backside”. The police officer judged that the then-prince’s action amounted to a “possible sexual assault” but no action, of course, was taken.

At another point in the updated edition, Lownie returns to his theme of Fergie’sMarie Antoinetteattitude to food, reporting that her chef was ordered to “make a sizeable cream cake” every day. If it wasn’t eaten, the cake was thrown away – and a fresh one baked the following day regardless.

The book itself begins, as with all of Lownie’s books, with a question – in this case, whether Andrew and Fergie really were, as they used to be described, “‘the happiest divorced couple ever’. I thought, of course, that was a myth.” In general, Lownie admits, he is drawn to “what I call rogue royals, the bad boys. They’re more fun.” Still, when he started on Andrew, he was warned off it. “Everyone said ‘You’re crazy, he’s so boring, no one’s interested’.”

It turned out, of course, that people are very interested in Andrew – including various members of America’s Congress. “I was lucky it was part of the news agenda,” he says. WhenEntitledwas first published, “though it got a bit of attention, nothing happened. If there hadn’t been the Epstein releases, it would have just died a death.”

Why Epstein’s death may not have been a suicide

Lownie sets out persuasive evidence that suggests that Epstein may not have died by suicide – a position long dismissed as an outlandish conspiracy theory. “I think the thing with the Epstein revelations is we all say, ‘Oh conspiracies don’t happen, it’s all cock-up’. Then you suddenly realise that there is sort of a conspiracy here. This is all carefully planned and it’s sort of supranational.”

When the news ofAndrew’s arrest on suspicion of misconduct in public officebroke in February, and the press had a field day, a quiet minority of people felt some empathy for the former prince. Does Lownie?

“Well, he’s basically under house arrest. His reputation has been trashed. I mean, that look of absolute terror on his face when he came back from the police station. So, of course anyone who’s human will have sympathy – and have sympathy for Sarah Ferguson.”

‘Andrew’s still quite cocky, he’s not very remorseful’

But, Lownie points out: “they brought all this on themselves. And actually, I had a contact who’s close to him, saying he’s still quite cocky, he’s not very remorseful… I mean, he is so nasty to people.”

Earlier this month,a man pleaded not guilty at Westminster magistrates’ court for using threatening words towards Andrew, while he was out walking his dogs near his home in Norfolk. Lownie estimates that although he does have some protection, if he were to be, “I don’t know, in his car with one policeman and five cars turn up and ram him, and they try to kidnap him – I mean, yes, he is vulnerable.”

Andrew, pictured leaving a police station after being arrested in February, is now a 'loner', claims Lownie

In the book we learn that, post-disgrace, Andrew is mainly spending his time watching golf on a vast television and playing on a flight simulator. Now 66, he’s also reportedly sinking many hours into playing Call of Duty; a royal source told Lownie that the former prince “prioritises gaming over work, health and hygiene”. It is hard not to feel a pang of melancholy at this desolate image: the former war hero and pin-up, now gaming deep into the night, all alone.

There is something, Lownie believes, profoundly “sad” about Andrew. “He talks about himself being a loner. And he’s always been kept apart from people. At school, he had separate accommodation because of security. He always had a separate wing on the naval bases. He didn’t drink. I think he kept himself apart, possibly because he thought he might be betrayed. … There is something that is not quitethere. So of course one feels sorry for him, but at the same time he is responsible for his own actions.”

For many, feeling sorry for Andrew is a stretch too far – but it is easier, I venture, to feel sympathy for his and Fergie’s daughters. I mention to Lownie that I’d watched him promise, in a YouTube video last year, that he was going to reveal much more detail about the girls’ activities in the paperback edition. But the book has relatively little about them. How come? “Lawyers,” he says darkly.

Still, Lownie says he feels that the Royal family needs to develop a proper strategy for how it deals with Beatrice and Eugenie. “There’s a slightly schizophrenic approach at the moment. One moment, the daughters arevery publicly not coming to Ascot– the next they can come. They can come to Sandringham – no, they can’t. It’s a bit cruel. I think it’s almost as if they can’t decide what to do.”

Beatrice and Eugenie should give up their titles

Lownie believes that the princesses should give up their titles and keep a low profile. But, he claims, their professional lives – Beatrice is a strategic adviser for the company Afiniti, and Eugenie is a director at the art gallery Hauser & Wirth – are dependent on their association with the Royal family. “Their jobs rely on that access that they give as royals. I mean, it’s never Beatrice Mozzi who’s going off to conferences – it’s always Her Royal Highness. And that’s part of the problem – they want the trappings, the perks, without any of the responsibilities.”

Beatrice and Eugenie at Royal Ascot, 2018

The hardback ofEntitledshot to number one in the bestseller charts, and the paperback is bound to do similarly well. Does it feel good to be at the peak of his career, at 64? “Well, I can only get better,” Lownie jokes. “No, I mean, I’ve watched so many authors over the last 40 years and there’s sometimes a book that catches on because of timing – and then you retire back into obscurity.”

Advertisement

For all the book’s success, for many – especially in the Establishment – Lownie is deemed a menace. He is perceived as targeting the Royal family, and even sometimes accused of undermining the very fabric of the country, by revealing such damning information about them.

He has, he admits, paid a social toll for his work: there’s been a bit of “cold-shouldering” from his acquaintances. But he is, he insists, a royalist, and he genuinely wishes for the Royal family to continue to reign over us for many decades to come – he just happens to think they need to be held to account.

“I don’t think anyone should be given a pass just because they’re a member of the Royal family. There’s not a two-tier justice system here,” he says. “My father was a judge and Scottish, and I think there’s quite a strong Presbyterian element to this that drives me on. The monarchy depends on trust and respect from the public, and it carries moral authority. It brings the nation together… and that compact is undermined by people who seem to have their noses in the trough.”

It also undermines, he points out, “the reputation and the good work of all the others – the Prince Edwards andPrincess Annes, who get on with it day by day.”

As for the accusations that he is a scurrilous muckracker, Lownie seems exasperated by them: “There are a lot of, I would say, slightly jealous royal writers. Because clearly [the book] has changed the narrative. A lot of them who produce the sanitised stuff don’t like an outsider coming in and disrupting.” Someone has warned him, he adds, that publishing his Andrew biography would be like riding a tiger: “and ithasbeen like riding a tiger. And, you know, I prefer not to.”

Lownie at home

Lownie lives in his Westminster townhouse with his wife and their two grown-up children; Alice, who works in publishing, and Robert, a journalist. What do they make of their father’s book? “I think they’re probably slightly embarrassed by it,” he says. “I think they also think I’m probably a bit of a media tart.”

Well, is he? “I hope not,” he says, looking rather worried. “I’ve been in the shadows for the last 40 years as an agent supporting writers, and that’s where I feel happiest.”

He maintains a frequent presence in the public eye – speaking on TV, radio, YouTube, podcasts and so on – as he feels an obligation to publicise the book, and also because he feels “more and more strongly about the need for more royal transparency. Really, that for them, that they do need to modernise. The old system of just hoping the problem will go away isn’t going to work. If they want to survive and want to restore trust and respect, they have to adapt. … And if they really want to restore respect, it’s not by us operating with censorship like Stalinist Russia or China. It’s actually by having openness and behaving well.”

The King’s recent trip to America –during which Charles seemed to charm Donald Trump to his core– is a good example, Lownie believes, of “just how effective” the Royal family can be. “I think we’re very lucky that Charles is clearly a highly cultured, compassionate, clever man.” After all, he says, “We could have got Andrew. I mean, if Charles had been killed in a skiing accident, we might well have had him as regent at least.” How would that have shaken out? A smile. “It would have been a disaster.”

APRIL 28: King Charles III and U.S. President Donald Trump attend a state arrival ceremony on the South Lawn of the White House

William ‘is quite controlling, quite secretive’

Lownie is cautiously optimistic about how William will fare as king: “From the things I’ve heard, he is more prepared to move to this more European-style monarchy – fewer people with titles who are not working royals, look at the Crown Estates – but at the same time, he’s not declared the tax that the Duchy pays. His father did. And he is quite controlling, quite secretive, quite suspicious of the media.”

He is less ambivalent, however, about Catherine, and agrees with those who see her as the monarchy’s shining hope.The Princess of Wales, he reckons, is a “nice middle-class girl” – and “they’re far better royals than the royals themselves, and I would argue it’s the same with Sophie and Camilla”. Catherine is also, Lownie believes, “very tough – shades of the Queen Mum. And I think as an outsider, she gets it in a way I don’t think the royals do.”

Lownie sees himself as an outsider in the Windsor world, but there are striking parallels between him and the other Andrew: both are around the same age (Lownie is 64 and Mountbatten-Windsor is 66), both went to private schools in Scotland (Lownie to Fettes, Mountbatten-Windsor to Gordonstoun), both were involved in the military (Lownie as a naval reserve). Lownie remembers Andrew coming to play rugby at Fettes, and remembers hearing the stories about him, even then.

And Lownie has said that his wife, Angela Doyle, a house historian, was “brought up” with Ferguson, that they were neighbours: “So I knew quite a lot of the stories. For example, the story which no one has picked up on, Prince Philip and Susan Barrantes [Ferguson’s mother] being lovers. That all came from family information.”

Still, observing the teetering piles of royal material in Lownie’s house, you would imagine that he had been obsessed with the family since he was a boy. But in fact, it took him years to get to the royals. After founding his Andrew Lownie Literary Agency in 1988, he launched his writing career with a biography about the Scottish writer John Buchan in 2003, followed byStalin’s Englishman, a book about the spy Guy Burgess in 2015. He had long had a sense, he says, “that it’s not a proper job, being a writer” and that while various members of his family had done it, “they always had other jobs”.

Lownie at home

It was only when he was writing about Burgess that he realised there was a good book to be done on Lord Mountbatten. “I had no interest in the royals until then,” he says. “I’d probably never read a royal biography in my life.”

Now Lownie is in the early stages of a new book about Prince Philip, which is so far shaping up to be a good deal more positive thanEntitled, he says. He clearly loathes the idea that people think he’s on some mission to wreck the Royal family’s reputation to such an extent that the whole edifice collapses altogether. “I don’t want to get a reputation for doing aTom Bower,” he says.

And he is still recovering, he says, from his five-year legal battle to gain access to the diaries and correspondence of Lord and Lady Mountbatten that became his bestselling bookThe Mountbattens: Their Lives and Loves(2019). He was successful in his fight to open up the archive – but was forced to cover his own legal costs, paying around £400,000 from his own pocket.

Entitled, he says, “will hopefully get me back to where I was five years ago. So [Andrew’s] kind of been my saviour.” In the rush to stump up the money for the legal bill, he even had to use money he’d inherited from his late mother that had been earmarked to pass to his children.

The doorbell rings, and Rob, Lownie’s son, appears to let in the photographer. Lownie calls out to him: “Are you embarrassed by my book?” “Not in the slightest,” his son calls back.

As to the claim that he is harming the country by publishing such damaging information about the Royal family, Lownie clearly finds the idea faintly ridiculous. “The role of historian and journalist is to tell the truth. We can’t sugarcoat it just to protect them,” he says. “If they have nothing to hide, they have nothing to fear.”

The updated paperback of Entitled: The Rise and Fall of the House of York by Andrew Lownie is published on May 21. Lownie will be appearing on the Daily T podcast on Sunday, May 17; you can watch episodes of The Daily There. You can also listen onSpotify,Apple Podcastsor wherever you get your podcasts.

Andrew Lownie interview: Andrew is still not sorry

The historian Andrew Lownie looks in pretty fine fettle for a 64-year-old man with an absolutely brutal work regimen. His day job, he r...
Prince of Wales ‘paying £100k more than previous tenant to rent Windsor home’

The Prince and Princess of Walesare paying almost £100,000 more than the previous tenants to rent their family home, Forest Lodge inWindsor.

The Telegraph The new cost is nearly 50 per cent higher than that paid by the previous tenants

The royals, who are now the registered lease owners of the Grade II-listed mansion, are paying £307,500 every year, according to The Times.

In July 2025, the couplesigned a 20-year lease on Forest Lodgein Windsor Great Park but the rent was unknown until now.

It is understood that they have agreed to publicly disclose the figure, having registered the official documents for their home.

The couple signed a 20-year lease on Forest Lodge, but the rent was unknown until now

The Prince and Princess of Wales areboth listed as the lease ownerson Forest Lodge in Windsor, paperwork submitted at the Land Registry on Thursday showed.

The lease agreement includes the mansion as well as two cottages within the grounds that are used as staff accommodation.

Documents show that Forest Lodge was previously let for £216,000 per year to Alexander Fitzgibbons, chairman of the party planning business Fait Accompli who signed a joint rental agreement with Cristina Stenbeck, a Swedish businesswoman. The company planned the wedding receptions for both the Prince and Princess of Wales in 2011 and the Duke and Duchess of Sussex in 2018.

The new cost, almost 50 per cent higher than that paid by the last tenants, is understood to have been reached after three valuations carried out by Hamptons and Savills on behalf of the Crown Estate, and by Knight Frank on behalf of the couple.

Cristina Stenbeck, a Swedish businesswoman, was one of the previous tenants of the estate

The Prince’s rent is paidusing the private income he receives after tax from the earnings of the Duchy of Cornwall estate.

Advertisement

The Prince and Princess also live at Kensington Palace, their official London residence,alongside Forest Lodge, and Anmer Hall, a mansion on the Sandringham Estate that they received as a wedding gift from Elizabeth II.

The Royal Family has faced heightened scrutiny over the past year aboutprivate property dealsbetween the family and the Crown Estate.

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor faced criticism after it was revealed that he had not paid rent on Royal Lodge on the Windsor Estate for two decades.

The Palace announced that he would beleaving Royal Lodge in October 2025, at the same time his title of prince was removed.

In February, Mr Mountbatten-Windsormoved out of Royal Lodgeto Marsh Farm on the Sandringham Estate.

Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor was forced to move to Marsh Farm after scrutiny over his rental arrangement at Royal Lodge

The Public Accounts Committee said in December that it was launching an inquiry into royal leases with the Crown Estate.

Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown, the Conservative committee chairman, said that increased scrutiny over royal property deals would “aid transparency in public interest information”.

Dan Labbad, chief executive officer of the Crown Estate, told the committee: “Following an approach from HRH The Prince of Wales and discussions with the Royal Household, the commissioners were asked to consider entering into a lease of the property to TRH The Prince and Princess of Wales for use as their primary private residence.”

The disclosure came as it was revealed that the Princess would join the Prince on a trip to India for his Earthshot Prize in November.

Prince of Wales ‘paying £100k more than previous tenant to rent Windsor home’

The Prince and Princess of Walesare paying almost £100,000 more than the previous tenants to rent their family home, Forest Lodge inWin...
Eurovision semi-final proves relentlessly energetic despite UK’s Eins, Zwei, dry performance

Well, at leastthere was no booing this time. After the hullabaloo over Israel’s Eurovision entrant being heckled on stageduring Tuesday’s first semi-final, Thursday’s second was a much less controversial affair.

The Telegraph The UK's contender, Look Mum No Computer, will probably not trouble the top of the final leaderboard

It was almostrelentlessly energetic in Vienna, and Europe also got its first glimpse of the man looking to end 29 years of hurt for Britain. Even though he did not need to qualify for the final – by virtue of the UK being one of the “big four” given a bye to Saturday’s showpiece event because of the amount of funding it provides – Sam Battle debuted Eins, Zwei, Drei in the Austrian capital.

Sam Battle lamented the drudgery of the 9-5 life in his song 'Eins, Zwei, Drei'

Performing under his mad-professor-esque alias, Look Mum No Computer, Battle lamented the drudgery of the 9-5 life but, for some inexplicable reason, found himself cheered by counting “one, two, three” in German. It was enough to get the Austrians in the crowd singing along with him.

While I liked the song enough whenthe recorded version was releasedin March, and Battle expended every last ounce of effort on stage, his live singing voice was probably not strong enough to trouble the top of the final leaderboard. In even worse news for Team GB, the BBC’s Rylan Clark and Angela Scanlon squandered a big lead against the Danish and Norwegian commentators in a quiz that filled time while the votes were counted.

Advertisement

The night started with a bang in the form of Bulgaria's crowd-pleasing tub thumper Bangaranga

The producers know how to start with a bang. For the second semi-final in a row, proceedings started with a crowd-pleasing tub-thumper in the form of the appropriately named Bangaranga by Bulgaria’s Dara. It is a pity that it was immediately followed by the utter tedium of Just Go, a mournful ballad by Azerbaijan’s Jiva, the most exciting moment of which was when a man wearing a pork pie hat wandered on stage and promptly wandered off again.

France's Monroe showed why she is so highly favoured to win it all

Some favourites for the title showed why they are so highly rated to go all the way. Monroe, France’s 17-year-old starlet, hopes to make it three winners in a row who could feasibly have had a career as an opera singer; Australia’s Delta Goodrem, who is probably best-known to British viewers for her time playing Nina Tucker in Neighbours, won loud applause with Eclipse, some very obviously fake piano-playing notwithstanding; Romania’s Alexandra Căpitănescu had the crowd screaming along to Choke Me, as she sang with a weird Miss Havisham-style figure under a hood on stage.

Notwithstanding the obviously fake piano playing, Australia's Delta Goodrem won raucous cheers with Eclipse Romania's Alexandra Capitanescu had the crowd screaming along to Choke Me

Malta’s Adrian took out a full-page advert in Thursday’s Guardian, apparently at his own expense, to drum up support for the semi-final, and it worked. Surprisingly, he made it through.

Malta's Adrian decided to take out a full-page advert in The Guardian to drum up support – and it worked

As was the case on Tuesday, there was too much lame banter between hosts Victoria Swarovski and Michael Ostrowski, which bodes ill for Saturday’s grand final. And we could all probably have done without the several minutes of filler where it was explained that, even though it seems that Eurovision is an entirely gay jamboree, only eight of the 72 singers to have won the contest identified as being LGBTQIA+ (their initialism).

We lost a further five countries – the expected fallers of Azerbaijan, Switzerland and Latvia, and the more surprising Luxembourg and Armenia – and now all attention turns to Saturday. Let’s hope that, like Thursday,there is no booing.

Eurovision semi-final proves relentlessly energetic despite UK’s Eins, Zwei, dry performance

Well, at leastthere was no booing this time. After the hullabaloo over Israel’s Eurovision entrant being heckled on stageduring Tuesday...

 

GEAR JRNL © 2015 | Distributed By My Blogger Themes | Designed By Templateism.com