News

Princess Kate and Prince William ‘feeling intense anxiety’ amid King Charles’s cancer battle

Princess Kate and Prince William are feeling “intense anxiety” amid King Charles’s cancer battle, according to a royal commentator.

The King is receiving treatment for a form of cancer and is currently not undertaking public-facing duties.

The Prince and Princess of Wales have also stepped back from royal duties.

Princess Kate announced in March that she had received preventative chemotherapy after cancer was detected in tests following abdominal surgery at the London Clinic.

The Prince and Princess of Wales have also stepped back from royal duties.

Getty

Queen Camilla, Princess Anne, Prince Edward and the Duchess of Edinburgh have stepped up to undertake royal duties in the absence of the King.

Prince William is the heir to the throne and first in the Royal Family’s line of succession.

Royal commentator Tina Brown has claimed that William’s proximity to the throne is causing the Prince and Princess of Wales “intense anxiety”.

Brown wrote in the New York Times: “News of Charles’s cancer has put William and Catherine in frightening proximity to ascending the throne…The prospect of it, I am told, is causing them intense anxiety.”

Prince William is the heir to the throne and first in the Royal Family’s line of succession.

Getty

However, Brown’s claim comes as King Charles is said to be planning to embark on a tour of Australia with Queen Camilla later this year.

The monarch is thought to be considering a two-week state visit to Australia after his cancer treatment started positively.

King Charles is “supercharging” plans for the two-week trip where he would also visit New Zealand and Samoa, according to a royal source.

The insider added the King is “over the moon” that his cancer treatment has started well.

Related Posts

Editor of America’s oldest magazine faces call to resign after issuing groveling apology for anti-Trump rant

The editor of America’s oldest magazine is now facing calls for her resignation after issuing a groveling apology for her anti-Trump rant earlier in the week. Laura Helmuth, the editor-in-chief of Scientific American, which has been published continually since 1845, went on the rampage against Trump supporters in posts to social media, describing them as fascists, racists and sexists. But Helmuth has now walked back her comments claiming she was ‘shocked and confused’ when she made them – likely in a bid to save her job.

Bhediya 2 – Trailer | Varun Dhawan | Kriti Sanon | Munjya vs Bhediya | Dinesh Vijan, Amar Kaushik 3

A man claims to have been bitten by a wolf and transformed into a shape-shifting creature known as a “Bhediya.” Reports emerge of strange occurrences in Chanderi, including…

Starmer travels to France for Armistice Day ahead of talks on how to support Ukraine against Russia following Donald Trump’s election win

Keir Starmer and French President Emmanuel Macron are set to hold talks on how to support Ukraine against Russia following Donald Trump’s election win. The leaders will speak on Monday in Paris to discuss whether US President Joe Biden can be convinced to give the war-torn country permission to use Storm Shadow missiles in their defence against Russia, The Telegraph reports. The newspaper revealed that there are high hopes in London that Biden will give permission to Kyiv to use the missiles – a request Ukraine has made for months.

How Boris Johnson and King Charles clashed over slavery reparations: Former PM told aide: ‘I went in pretty hard’

Boris Johnson clashed with the King over the issue of slavery, fearing he had been captured by ‘woke ideology’, a new book reveals. The former PM ‘went in quite hard’ on Charles, who was the Prince of Wales at the time, after he said he wanted to ‘acknowledge the evils’ of colonialism. It came after Charles had described the Tory government’s plan to deport asylum seekers to Rwanda as ‘appalling’, according to political journalist Tim Shipman

Revenge assassination plot that could still push the world to the brink: Why Iran wanted to kill Trump on US soil… and how Donald could wreak vengeance

It was not the only plot to assassinate Trump during the US election but, had it succeeded, it could have changed the world more than any other event of the past six months. That’s because it was not the act of some lone wolf but a state-sponsored conspiracy by Iran concocted as an act of cold-blooded revenge – at least, that’s according to US Department of Justice charging documents unveiled by a New York court last week. Farhad Shakeri, an Afghan-born fixer who once lived in the US but is now based in Tehran, is accused of accepting money from the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC), the private army of the Iranian regime, to surveil and then plot Trump’s killing in early October.

DEVA – Trailer | Shahid Kapoor | Rosshan Andrrews, Pooja Hegde, Prakash, Kubbra | In Cinemas 25 Feb

Deva, a top-ranking officer in the Indian police force, has faced over 125 encounters but has only failed to solve one case. The unresolved case is deeply personal…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *