The Borneo Post (Sabah)

UK tabloid fall out of love with 'Duchess Difficult' Meghan

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LONDON: The honeymoon period for former actress and newly-minted British royal Meghan Markle, it seems, is over.

Six months on from her fairytale wedding to Prince Harry at Windsor Castle, Meghan is faced with a daily barrage of tabloid headlines criticisin­g her courtly manner and warning her against becoming “Duchess Difficult”.

Pregnant Meghan was credited with breathing fresh air into the royal institutio­n when she married Prince Harry in May, but a series of reported palace fallouts and resignatio­ns have raised questions about her methods.

Senior courtiers have quit amid suggestion­s that Meghan is a demanding boss, firing off emails to staff in the early hours of the morning. British tabloids have reported she made sister-inlaw Kate cry during preparatio­ns for the wedding.

The family insists that Harry and Meghan’s plan to move out from next door to his brother Prince William and Kate is driven by the imminent arrival of their first child, but many believe it is a sign of a deteriorat­ing relationsh­ip.

Queen Elizabeth II was also believed to have been angered by Meghan asking to be loaned her emerald wedding tiara, according to newspaper reports.

It emerged last week that highly-respected courtier Samantha Cohen would be leaving after Meghan’s baby is born next spring following 17 years of royal service.

Another of Meghan’s assistants also resigned six months after the wedding, tabloids reported.

To her supporters, the duchess is suffering blowback for her modernisin­g ways and has become a scapegoat for the family’s underlying problems.

“It is interestin­g how Meghan... has become such a lightning rod for so many controvers­ies, from the royal family’s — shall we say — race issues to the British media’s obsession with pitting women against one another, with claims that she and Kate... are at one another’s throats,” wrote The Guardian’s Hadley Freeman.

All eyes on Christmas

Royal expert Victoria Arbiter told US magazine Inside Edition that the rumours of Meghan being difficult were “founded from absolutely nothing.”

Meghan’s estrangeme­nt from her father Thomas added fuel to the fire on Monday when he gave an interview calling for a reconcilia­tion.

He defended his daughter against claims that she was rude to staff, saying that “she’s always been polite”, but added that she “has always been very controllin­g”.

The 74-year-old also accused her of “ghosting” him since they fell out when he was found to have received payment for staged paparazzi photograph­s.

He was talking to Piers Morgan, the journalist who last year wrote about being friends with the “amazing Meghan Markle”, but who says he is now shunned by her.

Guardian writer Freeman said that Meghan had become “a high-profile example of some men’s inability to understand that women are allowed to say no.

“We have men acting like they have some kind of right over a woman,” she wrote. As with many families, Christmas threatens to be an occasion when tensions boil over, and royal watchers are casting a keen eye on this year’s festivitie­s.

The press has already leapt on Harry’s decision not to join in the traditiona­l Boxing Day pheasant shoot at the Queen’s Sandringha­m Estate, apparently to avoid upsetting his anti-bloodsport­s wife.

They are also looking at signs of a rift between Harry and his brother William following reports of a feud.

“Flunkeys will be checking to see how long the Sussexes spend at the festivitie­s,” wrote Daily Mail columnist Richard Kay.

“Last year, they were among the last to arrive and the first to leave,” he said, advising Meghan to “steer more towards being Duchess Different than Duchess Difficult.”

It is interestin­g how Meghan... has become such a lightning rod for so many controvers­ies, from the royal family’s — shall we say — race issues to the British media’s obsession with pitting women against one another, with claims that she and Kate... are at one another’s throats. Hadley Freeman of The Guardian

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 ?? — Reuters file photo ?? Prince Harry gestures next to his wife Meghan as they ride a horse-drawn carriage after their wedding ceremony at St George’s Chapel in Windsor Castle in Windsor, Britain, last May 19.
— Reuters file photo Prince Harry gestures next to his wife Meghan as they ride a horse-drawn carriage after their wedding ceremony at St George’s Chapel in Windsor Castle in Windsor, Britain, last May 19.
 ?? — Reuters photo ?? Crystal snow balls of Prince Harry and Meghan are on display for sale at the British shop in Paris, France, on Wednesday.
— Reuters photo Crystal snow balls of Prince Harry and Meghan are on display for sale at the British shop in Paris, France, on Wednesday.

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