Circa 2013-16, Prince William’s staff were ‘frustrated’ by his ‘lazy’ schedule

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Longtime royal gossips are well-aware that in the pre-Sussex era, Prince William and Kate used to get regular tabloid lashings for being lazy as hell. Some of the major royal reporters and royalists were saying horrible things about Will and Kate’s lack of work ethic and their pitiful public schedules circa 2013-2017. Those same people would never speak a word against the Waleses now, which is pretty sh-tty for the royal-media ecosystem. It didn’t help matters that William and Kate spent the first six-plus years of their marriage hiding out in Wales and Norfolk. In Norfolk, William “worked part-time” as a helicopter (co)pilot, only it turned out that he barely worked even part-time hours and he took blocks of weeks and months off for vacations. By the summer of 2017, William and Kate finally moved to London and committed themselves to becoming “full-time working royals” at the ripe old age of 35. Kate immediately protested by getting pregnant with Louis, and then Meghan Markle happened and the rest is history. Anyway, in Russell Myers’ biography of William and Kate, he got people to reflect upon the Cambridges’ Norfolk years and how everyone in the palace thought they were lazy AF.

As the future King, Prince William has a huge amount of influence within the Royal Family. According to a royal biographer, the Prince of Wales developed “protective instincts” early on, and remains “determined to break the cycle of misery” he experienced as a child. But William’s royal role hasn’t always been obvious.

In the new book, William and Catherine: The Monarchy’s New Era: The Inside Story, royal expert Russell Myers suggested that the prince experienced some growing pains when it came to finding a place for himself within the family. After leaving his RAF search and rescue pilot role in 2013, Prince William reportedly struggled to find a new direction.

“Courtiers dressed the announcement up as William entering a ‘transitional year,’ while carefully explaining that the prince would not necessarily take on any more royal duties,” Myers explained. “But, behind the scenes, William’s attitude had begun to frustrate his staff, with senior aides challenging him over the risk that he might be seen as lazy, given The Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh were still carrying out royal duties into their tenth decade.”

Myers spoke to one former royal aide, who explained, “William seemed to have the attitude that his grandmother had given him a free pass to take his time in deciding what he wanted to do, which was not the reading of the situation from anyone else involved in trying to map out his affairs.”

The former staff member continued, “We would gently ask him to consider taking on more duties or specific engagements, but he would immediately push back.”

According to the royal aide, everyone was concerned about Prince William’s lack of direction—except for the prince himself.

“There was an intense worry in the camp that he had no strategy for his long-term future and was continually putting off decisions over what direction he should take,” the former royal aide explained. “When the annual list of engagements completed by members of the family would be published at the end of the year, it was pretty embarrassing, but it didn’t seem to affect him one bit.”

[From Marie Claire]

All of this is true, and I’m actually surprised that Myers didn’t cover this work-shy era with rose-tinted glasses. The Norfolk era was all about Will and Kate avoiding work as much as possible and William in particular putting off any and all responsibilities. The sad truth is that William only became “keen” about being a working royal and/or the future king around 2018-2019. His keenness coincided with Harry’s marriage to Meghan, and coincided with the Sussexes overshadowing William and Kate (and the entire institution). Instead of working harder and developing an issue portfolio suitable for a future king, William was allowed to launch a massive smear campaign against his brother and sister-in-law with the intention of exiling them from the UK.

Photos courtesy of Instar, Avalon Red.

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