Andrew learns Congress plays harsher games than Buckingham Palace
Donald Trump demands files released, calls decades long scandal 'democrat hoax'
The former Duke of York, Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, just can't catch a break, especially not from across the pond.
A US Democrat is publicly declaring that Andrew "will be sorely disappointed" if he thought his troubles were over.
None other than Congressman Suhas Subramanyam, the US representative for Virginia's 10th district and a former advisor to Barack Obama.
He's accusing the royal of "hiding" from a government committee, suggesting Andrew is playing a very high stakes game of hide and seek.
Subramanyam is a key player on the powerful House Oversight Committee, which has formally requested that Andrew sit for a "transcribed interview" regarding his deeply problematic connections with the late, convicted paedophile financier, Jeffrey Epstein.
They sent a letter just 11 days ago, signed by a total of 16 members of Congress, demanding a response by this coming Thursday, November 20.
This letter revealed the committee has identified "financial records containing notations such as ‘massage for Andrew’ that raise serious questions."
Suhas delivered a stinging public rebuke to The Guardian, declaring that if the former duke "is hoping that the story will just go away by ignoring us and being silent, he will be sorely disappointed."
He stressed the prince's consistent appearance in the evidence they uncover, "It seems like every time we find more evidence, Andrew seems to be in the documents."
President Donald Trump, who has now insisted that the highly sensitive Epstein files should be released.
Previously resistant to the idea, the President posted on social media Sunday, "We have nothing to hide, and it’s time to move on from this Democrat Hoax perpetrated by Radical Left Lunatics in order to deflect from the Great Success of the Republican Party.”
This shift comes as a bipartisan push from Democrats and Republicans in Congress seeks to compel the US Justice Department to make all files, communications, and information related to Epstein public, including details surrounding the investigation into his 2019 prison suicide.
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