Prince William’s ‘sh0cking plans’ for son George’s future as he can’t kept the dark secret from him any longer


Prince George may only be 12 years old, but as second in line to the throne he already carries the weight of a future destiny he can’t escape. Behind the scenes, Prince William and Princess Kate are said to be carefully planning how to guide their eldest child into public life without overwhelming him too soon.

Royal author Katie Nicholl told The Mirror that William, 43, is acutely aware “the public need to fall in love with George as a youngster.” She added that the Prince of Wales knows “he can’t be kept under lock and key and only introduced when he’s 18.”

George’s Growing Role

So far, George and his younger siblings, Princess Charlotte, 10, and Prince Louis, six, have largely been shielded from the limelight. They are usually seen at major annual events such as King Charles’ official birthday parade, Trooping the Colour, and the royal family’s Christmas Day church service.

George and Charlotte have also joined their mother at her annual carol concert and have occasionally appeared at sporting events — from cheering England’s national football team to watching Wimbledon matches. George in particular is thought to be following in his father’s footsteps by supporting Aston Villa.

Aside from these appearances, most of George’s moments in the public eye have been linked to significant milestones: King Charles’ coronation in 2023, and more recently the 80th anniversary commemorations of VE Day. This May, he also attended his first solo engagement alongside his parents, meeting World War II veterans at a special tea. It’s expected that similar carefully chosen events will become more frequent as he grows older.

“William doesn’t want George to have the same level of exposure he and Prince Harry had as kids,” Nicholl explained. “So it has to be done very carefully.”

Royal commentator Duncan Larcombe pointed out the unique challenge George faces: “How do you explain it to a 12-year-old? Their closeness will be invaluable as George tries to process the fact he isn’t quite normal. He’s going to be king, he will be front page news all his life. That would be hard for anyone to get their head around, let alone a boy of his age.”

The King’s Concerns Before George Was Born

George’s future is also closely tied to the present. With King Charles undergoing treatment for cancer in 2024, William is already stepping into a more prominent role as heir. Nicholl noted that the crown has “never felt closer” to William than it does now. While he naturally wants his father to reign for many more years, she said William is “absolutely prepared” for the moment he must become king.

Charles himself reportedly had concerns about the monarchy’s future even before George was born in July 2013. According to Valentine Low’s book Power and the Palace, the then-Prince of Wales worried about the implications if William and Kate’s first child were a girl.

Just months before George’s birth, the Succession to the Crown Bill was passed, ending centuries of male-preference primogeniture and ensuring that daughters could not be overtaken in the line of succession by younger brothers. This is why Prince Louis did not leapfrog Princess Charlotte after his birth.

Still, Low wrote that Charles had questions about the royal house name of Windsor, which could theoretically change if a future queen married outside the family line. He was also said to be concerned about what would happen if a reigning queen married a Catholic, given the monarch’s role as head of the Church of England.

For now, those questions remain hypothetical. But what is certain is that George’s future is already being shaped by the careful planning of his parents — a slow, deliberate introduction to public life, designed to balance duty with as much normality as a future king can possibly have.