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Prince William 'made a conscious decision to prioritize company over family' after Megxit, royal expert claims

Prince William "made a conscious decision" to prioritize the future of his company over his family after Megxit, royal experts claim.

The Duke of Cambridge will always put the interests of the monarchy ahead of his relationship with his younger brother Prince Harry, says Jamie Lowther-Pinkerton said in a Channel 4 documentary.

He also said that there were many instances of Wills choosing to take the "harder path" to do honorable things, and that the Duke would never renounce right or wrong.

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 In the following episode of the Channel 4 docuseries The Real Windsors: A Very Modern Prince?

Katie Nicholl, Vanity Fair's royal correspondent, will also be on the show next week. I think he would have had to stop being his beloved brother who was absolutely his brother's number one fan in order to put on the .

'' and the monarchy's best interests It takes precedence over himself and his brothers and their relationship. The compass is set perfectly rigidly to true north.

''Knows what is right and what is wrong, even if it means he gets hit. Even he never gave it up.It worked for him where it was very easy to follow one route.

"But it was neither honorable nor right, so he chose the harder path." worked as a member of He was appointed William and Harry's first private secretary in March 2005.

His new role came a few weeks after Harry. He hit headlines for wearing a Nazi uniform as a fancy dress and later helped both princes shape their military careers. and believes the monarchy will be in safe hands when he takes over.

He said: ``He has inevitably drawn much from the example she has set over the years. There's that great role model.In a way, he's lucky because he sits at the bottom of the mountain in terms of how generations look.And he can see those generations and take advantage of them.

"The monarchy is always changing, always evolving. Each generation does it a little bit differently, and there are many common themes. That's why it's an evolution, not a revolution."

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