
The Daily Heretic Andrew Lownie - Jacob Rees Mogg is a Royal SYCOPHANT
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Why do so many politicians still tiptoe around the monarchy — even in the middle of its biggest scandals? In this episode of Heretics, I’m joined by Andrew Lownie, the royal biographer whose work has repeatedly unsettled the establishment, to discuss Jacob Rees-Mogg, deference to royalty, and a very public clash that revealed how uncomfortable some figures become when the royals are scrutinised.
Andrew Lownie explains why he believes Rees-Mogg embodies a wider political instinct in Britain: reflexive loyalty to the Crown, even when serious questions are being asked. The conversation revisits the now-infamous on-air confrontation on GB News, where Rees-Mogg challenged Lownie’s research into Prince Andrew. According to Lownie, that exchange wasn’t just personal — it exposed a deeper tension between evidence-based investigation and old-fashioned reverence for royal power.
From there, the discussion widens into how royal criticism is policed in Britain. Lownie describes the resistance he has faced as a biographer, the institutional reluctance to confront uncomfortable facts, and why politicians often act as defenders rather than watchdogs. He argues that figures like Rees-Mogg don’t merely disagree — they instinctively protect the institution, even when the evidence demands tougher questions.
The episode also explores why this deference matters. Lownie contends that when politicians close ranks around the monarchy, accountability collapses. Serious allegations are softened, scrutiny is delayed, and the public is left with a sense that there are two systems of justice: one for ordinary citizens and another for those born into power. The clash with Rees-Mogg, he says, was emblematic of that dynamic playing out in real time.
Importantly, this conversation is not about personalities alone. It’s about culture — the British habit of bowing to status, the fear of being seen as “disrespectful”, and the cost of that mindset when institutions fail. Lownie explains why challenging royal narratives provokes such hostility, and why journalists, historians, and politicians so often fall into opposing camps when the monarchy is questioned.
You don’t have to agree with Andrew Lownie’s conclusions to find this episode compelling. Its value lies in watching how power reacts when it’s challenged, and why a single TV argument revealed so much about Britain’s ruling instincts.
If you want to understand why criticism of the royals still triggers defensiveness — and why some politicians act less like representatives and more like courtiers — this episode is essential viewing.
Watch the full podcast here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ujjX8qViyWc
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