• Reading Level 4-5
Citizenship | Politics

Downfall of Britain’s ‘pariah prince’

Playboy to pariah: Reports suggest that the future king, Prince William, will ban Andrew (above) from his coronation.

Is the monarchy at risk? With a new book threatening new allegations against Prince Andrew, the Royal Family has finally cut him loose. Some think it may not be enough to save them.

Comprehension quiz

  1. The word “prerogatives” in this context means:

    A: Financial payments made to the Royal Family

    B: Criticisms made against the government

    C: Laws that apply to everyone in the country

    D: Special rights or privileges held by a particular person or group

  2. Which word is the closest synonym for “jettison”?

    A: Forgive

    B: Discard

    C: Question

    D: Defend

  3. Which of the following statements from the article is presented as an expert inference rather than a verifiable fact?

    A: “Eighteen to 24-year-olds are evenly split, with 42% in favour of abolition and 41% against…”

    B: “In 2014, Virginia Giuffre… alleged that she was forced to have sex with Andrew on three occasions…”

    C: “Many experts believe this [Giuffre’s posthumous memoir] is what pushed the Royal Family to jettison Andrew.”

    D: “Andrew… first came under scrutiny in 2011 when it was revealed that he had been friends with Jeffrey Epstein…”

  4. What is the effect of including Virginia Giuffre’s claim that Andrew “believed having sex with me was his birthright”?

    A: To show that Prince Andrew was proud of his family history.

    B: To suggest that the writer does not have any knowledge of the allegations.

    C: To link Andrew’s alleged behaviour directly to his sense of royal entitlement.

    D: To prove that Prince Andrew has officially lost his right to the throne.

  5. According to the article, which two of the following are reasons why the monarchy might survive this scandal?

    A: Prince Andrew has renounced all his titles.

    B: It has a history of successfully reinventing itself after previous scandals.

    C: Parliament is not allowed to scrutinise the royals.

    D: It still has solid support among the British public.

  6. In your own words, summarise the two opposing viewpoints in the article about the future of the monarchy.

Answers

Tap to reveal
1. D 2. B 3. C 4. C 5. B and D 6. One viewpoint is that this could be the "beginning of the end" for the monarchy because the scandal suggests the institution itself encouraged his behaviour and Parliament is becoming less supportive. The opposing view is that the monarchy will survive because it still has strong public support and has a history of recovering from scandals.

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