Los Angeles Times

No Harry, Meghan on balcony for jubilee

Prince Andrew also won’t attend highlight of celebratio­n marking queen’s 70-year reign.

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LONDON — Buckingham Palace on Friday answered one of the biggest remaining questions about Queen Elizabeth II’s Platinum Jubilee celebratio­ns, saying that Prince Andrew, Prince Harry and Meghan, the duchess of Sussex, won’t be on the palace balcony when the monarch greets the public on June 2.

The balcony appearance is a centerpiec­e moment of many royal celebratio­ns, with the royal family smiling and waving to fans attending and millions watching on television around the world. But the buildup to the ceremonies marking Elizabeth’s 70 years on the throne have been dogged by questions about whether Andrew, Harry and Meghan would be in such a public spotlight amid Andrew’s sex scandal and family tensions.

The queen has now settled the matter, decreeing that only working members of the royal family will join her on the balcony to watch a Royal Air Force flyby after the traditiona­l military review known as Trooping the Color.

“After careful considerat­ion, the queen has decided this year’s traditiona­l Trooping the Color balcony appearance on Thursday 2nd June will be limited to Her Majesty and those members of the royal family who are currently undertakin­g official public duties on behalf of the queen,’’ the palace said in a statement.

The decision comes amid a debate over Andrew’s status after he reached a settlement with a woman who accused him of sexual exploitati­on. Andrew stepped away from royal duties and was stripped of his honorary military titles amid the scandal caused by the allegation­s and his links to the late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein. Still, Britain’s media have been awash with reports that Andrew wanted a public role in the jubilee after he settled the lawsuit.

Harry also kept open the possibilit­y of a balcony appearance in an interview with NBC last month, though he said that “security issues and everything else’’ might complicate such a decision.

Harry and Meghan, also known as the duke and duchess of Sussex, stepped away from front-line royal duties and moved to California in 2020.

They are locked in a legal battle with Britain’s Home Office over security arrangemen­ts when they travel to the U.K.

As plans for the jubilee began to take shape, Harry and Meghan announced Friday they would travel to the U.K. for the festivitie­s.

“Prince Harry and Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, are excited and honored to attend the queen’s Platinum Jubilee celebratio­ns this June with their children,” a spokespers­on for the couple said in a statement.

Although Andrew and the Sussexes won’t join the queen on the balcony, as members of the royal family they would be free to attend other events, a palace source said, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with palace policies.

The queen’s decision means that she will be accompanie­d on the balcony by three of her four children and their spouses: Prince Charles and Camilla, the duchess of Cornwall; Princess Anne and retired Vice Adm. Timothy Laurence; and Prince Edward and Sophie, the countess of Wessex.

Prince William, Harry’s older brother, and his wife, Catherine, the duchess of Cambridge, will also be on the balcony with their three children, George, Charlotte and Louis. William is second in line to the throne after his father, Charles.

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