Royals

Prince Harry, Meghan Markle conspiring with government to be back in Uk

Harry risks repeating Diana’s path as Palace ‘sabotage’ claims mount

By Web Desk
October 03, 2025
Is the Sussexes’ PR push the real royal game?
Is the Sussexes’ PR push the real royal game?

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have once again found themselves at the centre of a royal storm. This time, over claims of shadowy forces working to sabotage Harry’s fragile steps toward reconciliation with King Charles.

Just days after speculation of an “establishment plot” to undermine the Prince and Princess of Wales in favour of a Sussex comeback, the Duke of Sussex broke his silence, accusing unnamed “sources” of feeding false stories to derail his hopes of repairing family ties.

The controversy erupted after The Sun splashed a report suggesting Harry’s reunion with his father last month had been more stiff and formal than expected. 

According to the paper, the duke was left feeling more like “an official visitor” than a son when the pair shared tea at Clarence House, their first meeting in 19 months.

In a swift rebuttal, Harry’s spokesman blasted a recent report as “pure invention, one can only assume, by sources intent on sabotaging any reconciliation between father and son.”

Such claims echo familiar ground for the duke. In his memoir Spare, he described the “men in grey suits” he blames for driving him and Meghan out of royal life in 2020, mocking three of Charles’s most influential advisers as “The Bee,” “The Fly,” and “The Wasp.”

Now, with Harry openly warning of “sabotage” against his efforts to mend ties with his father, his public comments highlight both the fragility of his royal ties and the urgency of his mission. 

During his visit to Ukraine last month, he told The Guardian his focus for the coming year “has to be on my dad,” who continues to undergo treatment for cancer.

The comparison with Princess Diana is unavoidable. Her mistrust fuelled by deceptive tactics before the infamous Panorama interview left her isolated and vulnerable. 

Critics argue the real campaign is a Sussex driven PR effort to soften their image in Britain and rekindle support, even as calls persist for the couple to apologise for the pain their claims caused within the royal family.