The Peterborough Examiner

Spring royal baby is on the way for Prince Harry and Meghan

- GREGORY KATZ AND ROD MCGUIRK

CANBERRA, AUSTRALIA — They both wanted children. They knew it was time. Meghan had ended her acting career and moved to Britain to be a full-time royal. Prince Harry had stepped down from the military and wanted to settle down.

Their marriage was a five-star glamour blowout: the spectacula­r Windsor Castle setting, the horse-drawn carriage on a warm spring day, the vintage Jaguar with the top down, the Hollywood A-listers mixing with real-life royalty.

Now comes word that Harry and Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, are expecting their first child in the spring — a perfect coda to a May wedding that sent a very clear signal that a new generation of royals is coming to the fore even as Queen Elizabeth II continues her historic reign.

The highly anticipate­d pregnancy was announced Monday just hours after Harry and the former Meghan Markle arrived in Sydney, Australia, at the start of a 16-day visit that also includes Fiji, Tonga and New Zealand.

Word spread instantly: Internatio­nal visitors gathered outside Buckingham Palace for the Changing of the Guard ceremony felt they were partaking of royal history.

“It’s wonderful,” said 29-yearold Canadian tourist Braden Fraser. “I was happy about the first couple of marriages and the children coming. I’m glad to see the monarchy is carrying on. Back home we love them, so I’m glad to be here as it’s happening.”

It’s hard to overestima­te how popular Harry and Meghan have become.

The 34-year-old prince holds a special place in Britons’ hearts as one of the two children of the late Princess Diana. He had a bad-boy phase but redeemed himself with years of military service and a devotion to injured veterans.

Harry gained even more respect last year by talking candidly about his struggle with mental health issues related to losing his mother in a car crash in 1997, when he was only 12. No royal had ever publicly acknowledg­ed this kind of frailty, and his willingnes­s to do so in a bid to end the stigma of mental illness only raised his stature with the public.

Enter Meghan Markle, who represente­d a clean break from the royal mould. She was not British. She was an American TV actress. She was divorced, older than Harry and her mother is African-American.

She captivated Britain. There was an ease to her confident smile, and contagious excitement about moving across the Atlantic and joining the Royal Family. Meghan, 37, is seen as a modernizin­g influence on the at times stodgy Royal Family.

There are parallels between her life and that of Princess Grace, another American who left a successful Hollywood career to marry Prince Rainier of Monaco and start a family.

When Harry and Meghan got engaged, he was asked about plans for children. “You know, I think one step at a time, and hopefully we’ll start a family in the near future,” he said.

Meghan has also talked about wanting to have children. “I can’t wait to start a family, but in due time,” she said in 2016, when she was still starring in the TV legal drama “Suits.”

The royal couple started dating in July 2016 after they were introduced by friends, and Harry courted Meghan on a trip to Africa shortly afterward. They kept their relationsh­ip secret for several months, but word eventually leaked to the British press.

Harry confirmed their relationsh­ip in November of that year, and at the same time warned the British press against what he characteri­zed as “racial overtones” in its coverage of Meghan. He said the press had been so abusive that he worried about her and her family’s safety.

The announceme­nt of the pregnancy cleared up the mystery of why Meghan is not joining Harry when he climbs the Sydney Harbour Bridge on Friday to raise the flag for the Invictus Games, which he founded in 2014 to give injured military personnel and veterans the opportunit­y to compete in sports such as wheelchair basketball. The games open on Saturday.

The royal baby would be seventh in line to the British throne — but he or she won’t automatica­lly be a prince or princess.

The children and grandchild­ren of the Queen are princes and princesses, but this doesn’t apply to great-grandchild­ren. The same goes for the designatio­n of His or Her Royal Highness, though the Queen could choose to intervene on their behalf.

Instead, the child will likely become an earl if it’s a boy or a lady if it’s a girl.

 ?? CHRIS JACKSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Kensington Palace announced Monday that Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, and Prince Harry are expecting a child next year.
CHRIS JACKSON THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Kensington Palace announced Monday that Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, and Prince Harry are expecting a child next year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada