The Denver Post

DuCHEss MEGHan Calls ouT ToxiC onlinE BEHavior

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LONDON » The duchess of Sussex on Tuesday said she felt compelled to speak out against online misinforma­tion, negativity and hate speech out of concern for the world that Archie, her son with Prince Harry, would grow up in.

Asked if becoming a mother had made her more cautious or more courageous, Meghan said that it was the latter and that raising a child had made certain issues feel more urgent.

“It makes you so concerned for the world they’re going to inherit,” she said, addressing Fortune’s Most Powerful Women Next Gen Summit by video from California. “And so the things that you’re able to tolerate on your own are not the same, for you go every single day, ‘ How can I make this better for him; how can I make this world better for Archie?’

“At the same time,” she said, “I am cautious of putting my family in a position of risk by certain things, and so I try to be rather very clear with what I say and to not make it controvers­ial, but instead to talk about things that seem fairly straightfo­rward, like exercising your right to vote.”

Her comments came several weeks after she and Harry encouraged Americans to vote in the upcoming U. S. election and warned against misinforma­tion and hate speech, a rare interventi­on in American politics by members of Britain’s royal family, who typically stay neutral on political matters. Meghan, a U. S. citizen, called the election the “most important election of our lifetime.”

The couple, who gave up their royal duties in January and moved to Los Angeles, did not endorse any candidates in the video. Over the summer, Meghan said those who did not vote would be “complicit” in its outcome.

Harry and Meghan’s comments prompted a blowback in the United States. Rep. Jason Smith, R- Mo., sent a letter to Britain’s ambassador to the United States saying the couple had displayed an “inappropri­ate act of domestic interferen­ce.”

A spokeswoma­n for Britain’s Foreign Office declined to comment on whether the ambassador responded.

Before Meghan married Harry in 2018, she was a vocal critic of President Donald Trump. Asked at a news conference about the royal couple’s appeal to Americans to vote, Trump said he was “not a fan of hers.”

 ?? Getty Images ?? Harry and Meghan, the duke and duchess of Sussex, show off Archie, their newborn son, in May 2019 in England.
Getty Images Harry and Meghan, the duke and duchess of Sussex, show off Archie, their newborn son, in May 2019 in England.

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