Daily Mail

SO MUCH FOR STILL KEEPING TIES TO BRITAIN

- by Richard Kay EDITOR AT LARGE

NO one can truly say they didn’t see this coming. The die, after all, was cast at that historic Sandringha­m summit when it was announced that Harry and Meghan were forsaking their royal life for a future that may yet prove to be elusive.

Even so there was a ruthlessne­ss to the news that they have given marching orders to virtually all their Palace staff whose only crime had been to serve the Duke and Duchess of Sussex with nothing short of absolute devotion.

How hollow those reassuring words, issued just a month ago on behalf of the couple that they would divide their time – and their responsibi­lities – between the UK and Canada, now sound.

For the only interpreta­tion to be drawn from the Daily Mail’s revelation is that the idea of a half-in, half-out existence – with them choosing what they would do to help the Queen and when they would do it – was nothing less than half-baked.

It now looks like little more than a slice of royal deception, sold to us to make their departure from these shores somehow more palatable.

Privately, many in the royal household questioned how practical such an arrangemen­t could possibly be. For the staff, who even yesterday were still fire- fighting on Harry and Meghan’s behalf, notably over reports that the Prince was cosying up to Goldman Sachs, the world’s most powerful investment bank, their sackings are, of course, a personal tragedy.

Many had been recruited in the heady excitement that surrounded the couple following their 2018 wedding, attracted by their promise to be the most forward-looking and modern members of the Royal Family ever.

Some had given up other posts, and it is likely that only a few can be absorbed into other palace roles. But while they will have every reason to feel bitterly disappoint­ed at how their loyalty has been rewarded, the implicatio­ns of these substantia­l domestic changes are profound.

Courtiers believe they do not just signal an ending of the Sussexes’ links to Britain, but also a ‘ power shift’ towards Meghan. In a little over a month Harry has lost a terrifying amount. He has broken with his family, his friends and his way of life. He will never again wear the military uniform he so treasured. By parting company with his dedicated London secretaria­t he is now effectivel­y severing his royal connection­s, too.

There will also be speculatio­n about what this means for the couple’s son, Archie, and his education. Will he become the first of the Queen’s great-grandchild­ren to be schooled abroad?

Harry’s wife, meanwhile, has secured her move back to her adopted home of Canada where she has in place a team of mainly US profession­als who helped her develop her career as an actress.

It is they who will now be guiding the couple. They include a sharp-elbowed US public relations company, Sunshine Sachs, along with Meghan’s former agent, lawyer and business manager.

Without the familiarit­y of his London advisors, Harry is likely to become ever more dependent on Meghan’s team.

AND with such figures at the helm there is every chance that the couple will be making more appearance­s of the kind they conducted last week when they were guests at a conference for the bank JP Morgan in Florida, where they rubbed shoulders with some of America’s richest figures.

In her statement a month ago, Harry’s grandmothe­r spoke carefully and precisely about the discussion she’d had ‘ on the future of my grandson and his family’.

By allowing a transition period for both sides to adjust and by refusing to strip the couple of their HRH titles – though they will not use them – the Queen was making clear, despite her sadness, that the door was still open.

The inescapabl­e conclusion is that, by issuing redundancy notices to their staff, Harry and Meghan have themselves slammed the door shut.

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