Prince William gave an exclusive interview about his big new homelessness project

Prince William gave his first interview as Prince of Wales to Roya Nikkhah at the Sunday Times. The Times of London is part of Rupert Murdoch’s press empire (through News Group Newspapers). Nikkhah has become one of William’s go-to people, she’s always writing stories which are well-sourced from “William’s camp” and “royal sources in Kensington Palace.” This relationship between prince and royal reporter really flourished following NGN handing William a secret, seven-figure settlement in 2020, a settlement which was only revealed this year by Prince Harry. Rupert Murdoch has seemingly bought and compromised a prince and future king. What’s funny is that William doesn’t even seem to realize how compromised he is. Anyway, the exclusive interview with Nikkhah isn’t just William reading off some talking points (surprisingly). The purpose of this whole thing is for William to hype his big new project about homelessness.

A really big project: This month, the prince will launch “a really big project” from his and the Princess of Wales’s Royal Foundation, his first significant intervention as heir to the throne. “It’s nerve-racking,” he says. “But I’m really excited. I’ve been waiting for the right time to do this.”

Political Peg: There is genuine passion and optimism as William, who turns 41 on Wednesday, repeatedly mentions the name of his new five-year project, details of which are under wraps until the end of the month. He is frustrated that government, councils and charities have for too long been “managing” homelessness instead of “preventing” it. “We can do it,” he says. “It’s not insurmountable, this challenge. If anyone does become homeless [we can say], ‘OK, here’s the way back, here’s the pathway’. We can visualise that and we can show people that there is a way to do it.”

Changing the narrative about homelessness: “There’s a lot of preconceived ideas around homelessness. There’s still stigma, when actually a lot of people don’t understand the fundamental basics. We just see the individual on the streets and go, ‘Oh’. Loads of judgments as to why that person is there. You see more elderly people homeless because that’s what we see on the street. What we don’t see is the youth homelessness — sofa-surfing, people sleeping in their cars or on a mate’s bed. A lot of youth homelessness is very hidden. If you actually sit down and hear from young people why they’re in their situation, it’s like a jigsaw. There are so many pieces that have had to come together or fall apart, that meant they’ve ended up where they are.

But he’s above politics: William recently met Michael Gove, the housing secretary, and Sir Keir Starmer, the Labour leader, to brief them on his plans. Some might wonder why it is the heir to the throne, rather than the government, launching a big homelessness project. “I’m not here to talk about government policy,” he says diplomatically, conscious that the royal family must remain “above politics”. “My plan is an additive to what is already being done.”

His many homes: With homes at Kensington Palace, Adelaide Cottage in Windsor and Anmer Hall on the King’s Sandringham estate in Norfolk, as well as the run of many other royal residences, William is — by his own admission — “one of the most unlikely advocates for this cause”. In his new role as Prince of Wales, he also controls the Duchy of Cornwall, a 130,000-acre property empire stretching from Cornwall to Kent. That is a lot of spare bedrooms, and many wonder why he does not give some of them over to the homeless. An eloquent non-answer ensues. I ask again: “So there are no duchy plans yet for affordable housing?” A pause. “There is,” says William. “Absolutely. Social housing. You’ll see that when it’s ready. I’m no policy expert, but I push it where I can.” It is a curveball from William that aides were not expecting him to reveal, but it is thought he will “start small” with social housing on his land. If he can demonstrate it is viable, he will scale it up.

What’s the point of the royal family? The monarchy has had a bumpy few years. The death of Queen Elizabeth, the fallout from the Duke and Duchess of Sussex’s departure to America, and the Duke of York’s antics have dealt hammer blows to the institution. The public may want a few more “big gestures” from its royal family, and William knows this project is a chance to refocus minds on what the monarchy is for. The feud with his brother has taken up far more airtime than he would wish, and he concedes that not everybody sees the point of the royal family. “We’re all very busy and I think it’s hard sometimes to see what the family bring and what we do. But the amount of causes, the interests, the dinners, the meetings, the visits, whatever it is, that we do day in, day out, throughout the year, we’ve always been involved in that. It’s part of what we do. It’s trying to spotlight other causes, other people, other interests, and help people where we can. We’ll continue to do that.”

Whether he gives cash to homeless people he encounters: “I don’t tend to give money. I tend to buy them a drink, food, something like that. I find that when I’m walking around or driving past and see other people do it [give money], people don’t even look at them. How many people stop and talk to somebody who is homeless? Very few of us. In my job, I get to meet these people, I get to hear the stories, I get to feel it, I get to see it. That for me — and I’ve heard from them themselves — matters an awful lot. They’ve become invisible. It’s really important that society acknowledges that there is somebody there and they’re having a tough time. It shouldn’t happen but it’s right there. You can’t ignore it.”

He doesn’t want anyone to know that he’s helping homeless people: “I try and do these things subtly, when there’s no media and no one else knows about it.” He tried — and failed — to go under the radar in London last year, selling copies of The Big Issue. He was wearing jeans, trainers, a baseball cap and a red tabard, with no media in tow, but was soon recognised by passers-by. “It’s very hard to make it not about me — [that’s] what I don’t want to do. That was about promoting homelessness. If you’re doing to go and do genuine gestures, you do them privately, you don’t do them with an audience.”

[From The Sunday Times]

When he sold The Big Issue, he was posing for selfies and he literally brought a camera crew. Mr. You Don’t Do Them With An Audience, GMAFB. I don’t even agree that charity should be done in silence or away from the cameras, like that’s not the f–king goal, especially for a public figure like William – his “power” should be the attention he can bring to causes and charities he cares about. And I guarantee that people who are struggling would prefer to have money rather than a prince with five homes telling them patronizingly that they are seen and here’s a power bar. It will be interesting to see if he follows through with using Duchy properties to house homeless people (I suspect he will not) and I’ll admit, I’m curious to see what this big new project is. Ten bucks says it will just be William’s version of Kate’s Early Years busywork, like it will be some new study about homelessness or some new scheme to divert funds away from homeless charities and put those funds into the Royal Foundation (which is what happened with Heads Together).

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Cover Images and social media, cover courtesy of The Big Issue.

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69 Responses to “Prince William gave an exclusive interview about his big new homelessness project”

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  1. ThatsNotOkay says:

    You know, I wish him luck. It would be great if he could cure homelessness and not “That was about promoting homelessness.” Because no one needs to promote homelessness. If he starts using his properties, using his funds to get people help–THERE ISN’T JUST ONE CAUSE, WILLIAM!–then I will be a big ole cheerleader. Prove me right/wrong, Wills.

    • Ally says:

      Even though I don’t like him, for what he did to Meghan, Harry and Diana (Bullying H&M and calling Diana paranoid). I hope he succeed and somehow cure homelessness. I guess time will tell if it’s another publicity stunt OR if he actually cares.

      • Tessa says:

        Will can’t even cope with his own life
        This guy can’t cure homelessness

      • Cara says:

        His first homelessness project was Harry. His next homelessness project is Andrew.

      • Sue E Generis says:

        Seriously? Homelessness has been a societal issue for as long as we’ve had societies. You think WILLIAM, who has never done any work in his life, who has only ever done ‘philanthropy’ for PR, will be the human to solve it?

  2. Jay says:

    Colour me sceptical that William manages to buy someone experiencing homelessness a drink and a meal without anyone seeing it, and that’s why he never gives cash. Sure, TOB.

    • Tessa says:

      He is also surrounded by security and can’t just take a person off the street and pop into a pub without security inspecting the place first. Will may stage a photo op.

  3. New spin for I’m just here for a photo op and I’m trying to make myself look useful but I’m not. Doesn’t give money to homeless. All things already known just repackaged.

    • Mary Pester says:

      @susanCollins, ah Susan, how well I remember his “not staged 😂😂😂” pictures with the big issue seller. Isn’t it strange how we had the article of how Megan teaches Archie about this, and has a bag full of goodies in her car when she takes Archie to and from places, stops to give homeless people food and explains it all to him. Now we have BULLYAM doinh this!, couple of points, there was a lot of puplicity about the princes trust (the kings big charity) doing this kind of thing earlier this year and it was all over the press because of the awards ceremony for it. Now this from BULLYAM, is he trying to push his father out AGAIN? Finally, I live in cornwall and there are hundreds of empty priorities on HIS estates that he could be using for homeless people, but he isn’t. This is a PR exercise and nothing more because if it wasn’t, with his wealth, there is no need for it to take 5 years to get it of the ground.

      • @Mary Pester. Yep nothing to see here same old same old.

      • Minnieder says:

        Yes I call bullshit on him EVER giving a homeless person a damn thing.
        I started laughing at the section titled “political peg” 🤣 @kaiser you always nail it!!!

  4. Chic says:

    Peak Failure to Launch anything syndrome! The jokes just write themselves to boredom at this point.

    We are all so busy..’lol

    • Tessa says:

      That was the best line we are all so busy. When is wills next vacation

      • BothSidesNow says:

        It’s quite comical and insulting all in one sentence! Burger King isn’t invested nor interested in solving homelessness but it’s an enormous issue so he felt that he could capture an audience with his latest initiative.

      • Christine says:

        Word.

  5. Sophie says:

    Yeah, right, I’ll believe it when I see it. I’d like to see specific actions, and not general declarations. And why only social housing? Why not private renters too? Are only social tenants in need of affordable housing and not private tenants too? This is classism at its best.

  6. MSTJ says:

    I would love to see William end homelessness. Nowhere else has this happened in the rest of the world but seeing William do it in the UK and within 5 years (wow) would be legendary. I wouldn’t hold my breath but admittedly I am very interested in seeing what the heck he comes up with to do it and where exactly it will be after 5 years. 🤷‍♀️

    • JenC says:

      All W&K’s schemes come from the same playbook: solving some societal issue (big for W, small for K to not overshadow W) it announces a Big Rollout date, has some meetings with important people in advance of the Big Rollout and then…more meetings and a study.
      Homelessness is a deeply rooted issue and if it could be easily solved, someone would’ve by now. If W wanted to make a difference, pledge 50 million pounds to orgs currently doing this work. Stop thinking his group of aristocratic pr people have the capacity to solve complex social issues.

  7. Tessa says:

    William is all talk. Of course he gives no money away. I doubt he buys them food either. Will could not even manage to get along with his own brother.

    • SarahCS says:

      How often do we think he’s actually walking about coming into contact with homeless people when it’s not part of a photo-op?

  8. equality says:

    Maybe if the duchy belonged to the people instead of one person controlling it, the government could do more about homelessness. And what about the essential “homeless” on the duchy, who aren’t allowed to purchase and own their own farm/house? It’s hard to think that this isn’t another project like early years where it’s mostly talk and very little action. And most people don’t have time to stop and chat up the homeless because they have jobs and family obligations that aren’t handled by servants.

    • Christine says:

      This is 100% the most galling part of this, equality. Oh, you want to shit on the people who are rushing to and from their jobs, while giving money (that you absolutely WON’T give) to homeless people, because they don’t stop and chat and really dig deep into how homelessness occurs??

      F right off. THE REST OF US HAVE JOBS, WILLNOT.

  9. Alexandria says:

    Make it big and bigger. If it blows up spectacularly he’s gonna look so bad.

    Anyway if he somehow becomes a more emphathetic person due to this, instead of appearing to champion something just because H is doing it, then good. I wouldn’t hold my breathe tho. In summary, good luck Pegs.

  10. Aurora says:

    Homelessness is a socioeconomic issue brought about by policies supported by William’s Tory buddies. To rectify homelessness would require him to get political and go against his friends. So, no, William’s plans won’t amount to anything.

    • Brassy Rebel says:

      Nicely stated, Aurora. Ending homelessness is not a job for a non-political, privileged “prince”.

    • SarahCS says:

      Exactly, either he’s going to do something tangible and of substance which will be political or it will be yet another round of flashy PR smoke and mirrors with nothing of substance. Sadly I know which I’d bet on. These people do not change.

    • Normades says:

      Perfectly stated

  11. Rapunzel says:

    A quote not in the recap but getting attention:

    ” “When I left this morning, one of the things I was thinking was, ‘When is the right time to bring George or Charlotte or Louis to a homeless organisation?’ I think when I can balance it with their schooling, they will definitely be exposed to it. On the school run, we talk about what we see. When we were in London, driving backwards and forwards, we regularly used to see people sitting outside supermarkets and we’d talk about it.
    “I’d say to the children, ‘Why are they there? What’s going on?’ I think it’s in all our interests, it’s the right thing to do, to expose the children, at the right stage, in the right dialogue, so they have an understanding. They [will] grow up knowing that actually, do you know what, some of us are very fortunate, some of us need a little bit of a helping hand, some of us need to do a bit more where we can to help others improve their lives.”

    So…Willyboy points our homeless folks to the kids like zoo animals. And is planning the day he can take the kids with him to a homeless charity for the photo op…. cause lord know he hates photo ops with their mother.

    • Tessa says:

      Will is getting slammed in comments sections for his pointing out homeless people to his children as they drive by in a limo. Pointing out the plight. Will is really out of it

      • BothSidesNow says:

        @ Tessa, as he should be! The homeless are not there for Burger King to point them out and create an environment of naming and shaming. He’s such an idiot!

    • Jensa says:

      Yes, some revealing quotes there. And the Mail actually used the headline “Prince William reveals he points out homeless people to George, Louis and Charlotte during the school run through London”.
      He’s absolutely clueless.

      • BeanieBean says:

        But apparently only in London, William spoke in the past tense. And I don’t believe those trips included Louis, as he wasn’t going to school in London. It seems living in Windsor means they don’t ‘have to see’ homeless people. How nice for them.

  12. UNCDancer says:

    I sincerely hope this makes a difference for unhoused people in the UK. But I absolutely cannot with the whole I alone can fix this. Does this man really think that the charities and NGOs in this space haven’t been trying to prevent homelessness? I fully believe the UK government has done too little. But extend some grace to the folks who have been working the issue for decades, long before he decided that after Middle East peace, the climate change, taking care of the unhoused would be his new mission.

    • BeanieBean says:

      This is very much from Kate’s playbook. Talk about a big project coming up, that we’ll launch soon, have a big press day about the ‘launch’, then never hear about it again. Oh, and yes, to your point, pretend you’re the first to work on the issue.

  13. Amy Bee says:

    Reading this piece I’ve come to two conclusions – William is the real thicko not Harry and he’s not going to be using Duchy land and properties to help the homeless.

  14. Moxylady says:

    He’s a horrible person. But I truly hope that something good comes out of this. It would be historic if they truly ended homelessness in a way that helped people experiencing homelessness and integrated them back into security and fulfilling lives.
    It’s a very nuanced topic. From domestic violence, to addiction to living wage to accessible and affordable childcare to job training to continued support as they struggle to maintain what they have gained to mental health support to …. It’s a big topic and it’s important.
    I truly hope he has intelligent hardworking people around him who can implement and manage the project and make it a success.

    • Tessa says:

      Will won’t help. It’s just an ego trip. He broke his own family. And would not accept harry and Meghan as a couple. And he wants more and more properties for himself. Will has a bad attitude.

    • Ginger says:

      Kate also claimed that she was going to fix “Broken Britain” and she didn’t. She came out with 5 questions and found out that the first 5 years are important. That’s it. These two don’t care. They just want their photo ops and for the British media to write how amazing they are.

      • BothSidesNow says:

        @ Ginger, can we also point out that these “ground breaking” initiatives that Burger King is proposing escapes his mind entirely of his other patronages and charities which have been completely ignored and are suffering? I would be certain that many of them would appreciate Burger King devote more time and energy to them as well. But alas, no. Burger King, along with Mumbles McButtons are simply lazy and clueless.

  15. Becks1 says:

    This is so similar to the Early Years thing……it sounds like he’s going to launch something to try to tell people why/how people become homeless. Maybe it will be 6 Big Questions. Like I can see him now, posing with a binder in front of a pie chart, with a line like “68% of people don’t know that homelessness is a problem for all age groups.”

    And like Early Years….if he can do something positive here, great. I just don’t see how he can end homelessness without touching politics, the same way Kate can’t really make a meaningful difference for the Early Years without touching politics.

    • Harper says:

      I feel like it’s going to be Solving Homelessness for the Young Through Football. Like, house them in empty football stadiums at night, because sports is the only thing that motivates Willy. He’s not really going to offer any shelter that is personally connected to him or historically royal.

      It is interesting that he is saying he is nervous about the project. It seems he knows he is opening himself up to criticism in some way. The fear of not being seen as the top guy and a total winner consumes him.

    • Ginger says:

      William and Kate oversell themselves. Kate’s early years thing was labeled as groundbreaking and she was a self proclaimed expert. Earthshot was labeled as the most prestigious award ever and now William is going to just end homelessness. All he is going to do is raise awareness (just like Kate) He will tell us that homelessness is an issue that needs to be addressed. That’s it.

    • Christine says:

      I’m waiting for the pie charts. There is zero chance this is going beyond a photo op with Willnot chewing on a pen, while gazing in the general direction of a pie chart.

  16. ML says:

    Homelessness is an important cause. Unfortunately so is mental health, racism, etc,… In 2022 one of the people we lost was a teenager to suicide. Around that time, W (re)supported mental health and I gave him a pass. My issue is that he hasn’t really improved things since then and now he has a shiny new cause.
    Building social housing is important, great if he does it. However, when visiting the UK a couple of times, I was horrified by how many people have been renting land from the nobility and working for them for literally hundreds of years. In terms of his duchy, maybe he would want to increase wages, allow families who have rented over a hundred years to be able to cheaply purchase their homes, etc. And implement this for the rest of the aristocracy.

  17. girl_ninja says:

    We’ll see what lazy Willy comes up with.

  18. Over it says:

    Talk is cheap just like 5 homes billionaire billy. I wish people would keep reminding the world that wank is an abusive dullard.

  19. SarahCS says:

    OMG

    He seriously gets all this attention (and front page headline) without actually telling anyone what the big idea is? How is this a thing?

    I know the press in this country is broken but this makes me want to weep.

    • BeanieBean says:

      Laughable, right? Who else would get the air time, or print pages, to announce they’re going to do something? Or wrangle appointments with a couple of top (I’m assuming) political figures?

  20. Scout says:

    Quote from interview:

    ‘Yes I personally plan to make everyone homeless by acquiring perfectly good homes for my family and then moving out of them. It’s is quite a big task I know; but I am determined.’

  21. Noor says:

    In 2018 William said that it is his life mission to bring peace in the Middle East. It was widely reported by the Tabloids.

    What happen since then? There is no accountability.

    So we have to see what happen after he said he will end homelessness In UK

    • rawiya says:

      I just made a comment asking the same thing! Great minds. Everything’s fine over there. He fixed it. They want to Jordan. Attended a wedding. It’s all taken cared of.

  22. rochelle says:

    Good luck to William only took him 10 + years to try and do something about it. All of it sound to good to be true. I don’t see homelessness ending with a 5 year plan.

    • BeanieBean says:

      I think he & Kate only just discovered the Five Year Plan concept. What they haven’t yet learned is that people expect a review of accomplishments after those five years.

  23. Harper says:

    Does Willy intend to provide every homeless person in the UK with their own keys to a private residence/room, or does he mean offering consistent overnight shelter so no one has to sleep on the street? There is a big difference in the scale of a project that provides communal shelter vs. a dedicated personal space that is not shared. Does he want the homeless to have the dignity of autonomy and privacy, or just want them off the street so he can drive by without guilt? He doesn’t seem to think they deserve cash unless a smile is attached, but cash does give the homeless the autonomy to choose what they want to buy, which is a basic human dignity.

    Also, did he finish saving the planet already?

  24. HeyKay says:

    The US has an enormous homeless situation that we are not fixing at all IMO.
    Our state and federal gov’t can’t get a handle on it at all.

    Good luck to William.

  25. rawiya says:

    “I don’t tend to give money” Well, sometimes what the person needs is money. They don’t want a sandwich. They want $10 so they get pain medicine or some clean underwear or soap or a bus ticket. Geez. Also, didn’t The Big Issue fold soon after his PR shoot? I don’t think the company is around anymore. And did he ever solve the Middle East Peace issue? I thought that was his big project. I can’t keep up with him and Kitty; they do so much.

  26. Harla A Brazen Hussy says:

    This is all very reminiscent of his goal to change social media and tech, he comes in guns blazing, then realizes how vast the issue is, wipes his hands of it and walks away. I bet $1 that before 5 years are up he’ll be bored and done with homelessness too.

  27. Mslove says:

    I know what’s going to become of this project.

    Jack. Squat.

  28. BeanieBean says:

    ‘…the dinners, the meetings, the visits, whatever it is, that we do day in, day out, throughout the year….’ Poor overworked poppet. Is that how he got those tan lines on his wrinkled forehead? All those dinners & meetings?

    • QuiteContrary says:

      “Whatever it is, that we do…” What exactly do you do, Willy, pray tell?

      Clueless clod.

  29. HeyKay says:

    Does the UK have Habitat for Humanity?
    Look what Jimmy Carter has done with his charity work.
    William should partner with an established charity of his choice, add funding from his own money, do PR, and then publicize the success of those who are assisted.

    I’m not a Mike Rowe fan but he is doing some good with his MikeRoweWorks foundation by giving scholarships.
    Do something! Then go ahead and brag about it. But do it.
    Talk is so cheap.

    Why can’t the BRF see how awful their wealth hoarding looks?
    Of course, Bezos and Gates are equalling awful.

  30. Jaded says:

    We have a serious homeless problem where I live. One business to help house the homeless that has been modestly successful is taking old storage containers and refurbishing them into small homes, complete with basic furniture, portable composting toilets, etc. It’s happening on a small scale for the time being as land is hard to find but it’s a start.

    If you’re reading this Willnot, why not start funding something like this? On some of your vast crown land?

    • Normades says:

      I have seen homelessness grow to horrible rates in the United States. Sure William is fos but also everyone needs to look at this in their own backyard. In the States I think it has so much to do with not having health care. In America you are one health tragedy away from loosing your home.

  31. J.ferber says:

    Let the homeless live in all his “unusable” palaces, which seem to be ALL of them as of now. Imagine all the people who could live well off their own tax dollars.

  32. blunt talker says:

    Providing homes for the homeless will take more than that to cure the problems-many homeless people need drug or alcohol counseling-they need marketable skills to maintain the upkeep on these homes-I really don’t believe they will let him put something like that in a beautiful scenic spot in Cornwall.

  33. JB says:

    I’m sorry…”The Duke of York’s antics” ????

    We’re talking about a sexual predator here, not a circus clown, ffs

  34. Mrs S says:

    Just do something productive and stop marketing yourself. He is hopeless. I’d wish he would cure homelessness and do plenty of more. He has the resourses few of us have. Very disappointing to hear about him.