Prince Harry and Meghan: Royal Family 'hurt' as couple begin 'next chapter'
The Royal
Family are said to be "hurt" at the Duke and Duchess of Sussex's
announcement they will step back as senior royals.
Prince Harry
and Meghan did not consult any senior royal about making the statement, it is
understood.
Buckingham
Palace was "blindsided", said BBC royal correspondent Jonny Dymond,
as talks about their future had begun but were in very early stages.
The Palace
said there were "complicated issues" to work through.
In their
statement on Wednesday, Harry and Meghan said they made the decision
"after many months of reflection and internal discussions".
They said
they intend "to step back as 'senior' members of the Royal Family, and
work to become financially independent".
They plan to
split their time between the UK and North America, while "continuing to
honour our duty to the Queen, the Commonwealth, and our patronages".
"This
geographic balance will enable us to raise our son with an appreciation for the
royal tradition into which he was born, while also providing our family with
the space to focus on the next chapter," the couple said.
Despite the
couple's decision, Harry will still remain sixth-in-line to the throne.
The pair was
already preparing to launch their own Sussex Royal charity, which they set up
after splitting from the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge's foundation in June
last year.
The
Sussexes' new charity is expected to be global, linked to Africa and the US,
rather than domestic - and will have a commitment to female empowerment.
Meghan, of
course, is American herself and has a particularly close relationship with her
mother who lives in California.
But the
Sun, which broke the story on Wednesday, was firm in its speculation that
Canada was their likely destination.
The couple
have just returned after a six-week break from royal duties, which they spent
in Canada with their eight-month-old son, Archie.
After
returning to the UK on Tuesday, Harry, 35, and Meghan, 38, visited Canada's
High Commission in London to thank the country for hosting them and said the
warmth and hospitality they received was "unbelievable".
Former
actress Meghan lived and worked in Toronto for seven years during her time
starring in the popular US legal drama Suits.
She has
previously spoken about adopting the city as her second home after her native
Los Angeles, and she she has several Canadian friends.
The couple's
announcement raises numerous questions over what their future royal roles will
entail.
In stepping
back as senior royals, Harry and Meghan have announced they will no longer
receive funding from the Sovereign Grant.
The couple
said this will make them "members of the Royal Family with financial
independence."
The
Sovereign Grant is public money which pays for the cost of official royal
duties, in exchange for the surrender by the Queen of the revenue from the
Crown Estate.
The Queen's
Sovereign Grant from the Treasury was £82m in 2018-19.
The couple
said the Sovereign Grant paid for 5% of their official office from 2019, with
the remaining 95% being funded by Prince Charles through his income from the
Duchy of Cornwall.
Under
current rules, the pair said they are "prohibited from earning income in
any form", but in their new roles could follow other title-holding royals
in having full-time jobs.
The costs of
official overseas visits will be funded by the Sovereign Grant and
contributions from the host country "when appropriate".
The couple
are classified as "internationally protected people", which means
they must have armed security provided by the Metropolitan Police.
They will
retain Frogmore cottage, the Grade-2 listed property in Windsor that cost
taxpayers £2.4m to renovate, as their official residence so they have a
"place to call home" in the UK.
Royal
historian Prof Kate Williams said it will be "difficult" for Harry
and Meghan to lead "normal" lives, as media interest in them will
increase after their "unprecedented" move.
She told BBC
Breakfast: "Harry and Meghan are global celebrities. Meghan was already
famous [due to her former acting career]" as was Harry, who will become
even "more significant" when his father - and later his brother -
becomes king.
"He is
always going to be very close to the royal fold. It is going to be difficult if
Harry and Meghan are going to live in Canada for a certain period of time and
try and get on with business and be normal, charitable CEOs.
"They
will require security because I don't see the media interest in them waning, I
see it as probably increasing, because what they're doing is so unprecedented
for royals."
She said the
Metropolitan Police or Foreign Office would pay for their security on royal
business, but their security in Canada could be funded by their global charitable
foundation.
Royal
commentator Penny Junor said the couple's actions were reminiscent of those of
Harry's mother, Diana, Princess of Wales. The suggestion that they had not
consulted other royals before making their statement was "beyond
bizarre".
She said:
"It has echoes of Diana when she suddenly announced after her separation
[from Charles] that she was stepping back from 50 of her charities without
consulting anybody.
"The
problem is that they are not working for themselves, they are working for a
family firm and to be making announcements of this sort without consulting is
beyond bizarre."
Graham
Smith, a spokesman for Republic, which campaigns for an elected head of state,
said Harry and Meghan's decision "raises questions about the monarchy's
future" and will prompt taxpayers to ask how the couple's extra security
and overseas lifestyle will be funded.
Mr Smith
questioned why they were announcing they were working towards being financially
independent, saying: "To suggest that they're not already financially
independent is incredibly crass and belies a sense of self-entitlement and a
lack of self-awareness that is common among royals."
He added:
"This really is wanting to have your cake and eat it. They have said they
will dip in and out of royal duties as it suits them but won't stop taking
public money until they find other sources of income."
This is
clearly a major rift between Harry and Meghan on one part, and the rest of the
Royal Family on the other.
There are
far more questions than answers; what will their new role be? Where will they
live, and who will pay for it? What relationship will they have with the rest
of the Royal Family?
And there's
the institutional question. What does this mean for the Royal Family?
It comes
just months after Prince Andrew stepped back from his duties after a
BBC interview about his ties to sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.
Some might
see this as the slimmed-down monarchy that the 21st Century needs.
But Harry
and Meghan reached people that other royals didn't. They were part of the
reinvention and refreshing of the institution.
We're now in
wait-and-see mode as to whether this new model of being a royal can work - or
if this is really a staging post for them to leave the Royal Family.
Signs the
couple were unhappy with their royal life have been apparent for some months.
In October
last year, the Duchess of Sussex began legal action against the Mail
on Sunday over a claim that it unlawfully published one of her private letters.
The paper stands by its story.
At the time,
Prince Harry said his wife had "become one of the latest victims of a
British tabloid press" after a "ruthless campaign" of
"relentless propaganda".
"Though
we have continued to put on a brave face... I cannot begin to describe how
painful it has been," he said.
In an ITV
documentary last year, Meghan, who was born in the US, described motherhood as
a "struggle" due to intense interest from newspapers. "Not many
people have asked if I'm OK," she said.
On Wednesday
the royal couple announced they would be adopting a "revised media
approach" from the spring.
As part of
the new strategy, published on their website, they will "engage with
grassroots media organisations and young, up-and-coming journalists".
They will
also pull out of the so-called royal rota system, where journalists and media
representatives are given exclusive access to cover royal engagements on the
understanding they share the material they gather.
"The
current system predates the dramatic transformation of news reporting in the
digital age," the couple said.
Harry
is sixth in line to the throne - behind Prince Charles, Prince
William and his three children.
FROM .bbc.com/news/uk
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