Kate Middleton, the mother of Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis, reportedly knows how to handle Prince William’s temper tantrums.
Kate Middleton is said to be such a major influence on her husband Prince William that she treats him “like her fourth child.”
The claim was made by royal author Tom Quinn, who has written a new book, “Yes Ma’am: The Secret Life of Royal Servants.” Quinn spoke to hundreds of former and current palace staff members to learn what it’s like to watch over the House of Windsor.
Fox News Digital reached out to Kensington Palace, which represents the offices of the Prince and Princess of Wales, for comment. A spokesperson for Buckingham Palace previously told Fox News Digital, “We don’t comment on such books.”
KATE MIDDLETON RETURNS TO ST. PATRICK’S DAY PARADE AS COLONEL AFTER BATTLING CANCER
“Occasionally, William has little tantrums and irritations if things aren’t done the way he wants them done [as heir to the British throne],” Quinn claimed to Fox News Digital.
“But Kate is very good at managing that in the same way that she manages the tantrums of their three children – Prince George, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis. And so, there’s a joke among the staff that Kate treats William as the fourth because he occasionally behaves like one.”
According to the book, a member of staff told Quinn, “I don’t know where William would be without Kate – she hasn’t had everything done for her throughout her life, so she calms him down when he gets a bit fractious. She says he sometimes has to be treated as her fourth child!”
The insider claimed that Kate’s non-royal upbringing makes her easygoing to work with, and a favorite among staff, in comparison to William and his father.
“Suits must be pressed and laid out after a period of consultation the night before; shoes must be polished, ties chosen,” a staff member claimed to Quinn in his book about looking after King Charles III and his heir.
“Baths must be run at precisely the same time each day and both King Charles and the Prince of Wales, Prince William, are prone to tantrums if things are not done to their liking,” the aide claimed, as quoted in the book.
CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER
“’They both get irritated very quickly,’” a former member of staff claimed, adding that the king and his heir are used to having things done for them, making them “very picky.”
“People who have everything done for them from childhood tend to be rather spoiled and prone to bouts of irritation because they have no idea how much work is involved in washing and ironing, polishing and sewing when they have never done any of it themselves,” the aide claimed, as quoted in Quinn’s book.
The future king may get moody when things don’t go his way. Kate is reportedly not fazed by his behavior.
“In many ways, William has had an emotionally damaging childhood,” Quinn explained to Fox News Digital. “I don’t just mean because his mother, Princess Diana, died when he was 15, which is enormous in itself. Everyone could understand that that was very damaging to him.
“But before that, the split between his parents was very public. All the unpleasantness between his parents was played out on the world stage. Meanwhile, he was looked after by paid staff.”
WATCH: PRINCE WILLIAM, KATE MIDDLETON LEARN FROM PRINCESS DIANA’S MARRIAGE
“For much of that time, it created an adult in William who was very needy,” Quinn claimed. “He loved spending time with Kate’s family because, unlike his, they were very warm, very close with each other, very emotionally aware.
“When Kate and William first got together, William tended to have tantrums if things didn’t go his way because he was still this emotionally needy child who grew up into an emotionally needy adult.”
As far as those alleged temper tantrums, they’re “less so now,” Quinn claimed, thanks to Kate.
And it was through the Princess of Wales that William reportedly got to witness the importance of being a hands-on parent.
According to Quinn’s book, Kate “vowed to cut out as many, if not all, the jobs traditionally associated with the nursery.” She wanted her children to have a close connection with their parents despite their royal titles, not paid caregivers.
“Despite the disapproval of many of the palace old guard, she has spent what many royal insiders see as a shocking amount of time doing the normal childcare tasks that in the past were farmed out to paid staff,” Quinn wrote. “But even Kate acknowledges that if you join the royal family, you have to obey some, if not most, of the rules.” In 2014, she appointed Maria Teresa Turrion Borrallo to help with the family.
“A very deeply entrenched tradition that Kate didn’t like was this universal rule that you don’t look after your own children,” Quinn explained to Fox News Digital. “From the time they’re born through their earliest years as infants and toddlers, somebody else, usually a nanny and a nursery maid, will do all the work for the child. Royal children don’t traditionally bond with their parents. Even Charles has said that he had a terrible childhood because he never saw his mother.”
“Once boys reach a certain age, they are sent away to school,” Quinn continued. “But as babies, they bond with a person who’s paid and then leaves. Then, another person comes along. It’s a very damaging tradition and Kate saw it from the beginning. Kate said, ‘I’m not going to do that.’ And she was able to do that because she had the support of William.”
LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS
But as expected, Kate did have to learn a few important rules about royal etiquette early on from William.
“Before Kate realized that, as a senior royal, you have to dress carefully… she once bought an outfit that William considered inappropriate,” one of the prince’s advisors claimed to Quinn, as quoted in the book.
“He told Kate she looked as if in order to dress she’d just run through a charity shop covered in superglue. Everyone thought this was very funny, including, to her credit, Kate.”
A former member of Kensington Palace also claimed to Quinn: “Kate was always happy to accept advice, both from the lower staff, with whom she got on very well, and from the more senior courtiers – and she took advice from the courtiers even though some of them were initially very snooty about her.”
Quinn also claimed in his book that despite all her royal lessons, the Princess of Wales isn’t allowing her three young children to participate in “blooding.” The longtime ritual calls for members of the royal family to smear blood on their faces from their first kill during fox or stag hunting.
“Catherine, Princess of Wales, has put her foot down and insisted there will be no blooding for her children,” Quinn wrote. “The king himself had gone through the rite as a child, as did his two sons, Princes William and Harry.”
“Kate certainly said that that was not going to happen to her children,” Quinn claimed to Fox News Digital. “I think Kate was horrified that this might happen to the children.”
And Kate wasn’t the only royal wife who objected to an ancient tradition involving the royal family.
“King Charles adored stalking as a young man and enjoyed hunting (that is, fox hunting),” Quinn wrote. “He was shocked when Diana, who was actually always more comfortable in the city, said she hated shooting, fishing, stalking and hunting – all the main country pursuits so loved by the royals.
“As a Balmoral [aide] put it, ‘That, I think, was the start of the deterioration of their relationship, whatever people say about it being entirely about the other woman!’”