should not be eligible to stand in for as a Counsellor of State because he no longer resides in the country, a new parliamentary briefing paper reveals.But could still stand in for his mother should she become incapacitated, despite having to step down from public duties and relinquish his HRH title because of the Epstein scandal.This week the House of Commons Library quietly published for the first time guidance on what arrangements can be put in place if a monarch is unable to perform their royal functions.
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