In the US they get tired of Harry and Meghan’s complaints: with their eyes always on the Royal House

The prince’s express ride Harry to the UK to see his 75-year-old father changed public perceptions of the complicated relationship between father and son. The prince moved to London on February 6 to meet with Charles III and give him a hug after the monarch’s announcement that he is battling cancer. His reaction, Harry’s, was immediate. She stopped by Clarence House and talked to him. Days later she would confess before the microphones of an American TV program that his father’s illness had helped bring them together, and that this process of his father’s could have a reunifying effect. He was in Canada, at the launch of the Invictus games. It seemed like the beginning of a new era in the family relationship.

Things don’t get fixed that quickly. The Sussexes mark four years since they left the Royal Family. An anniversary that comes when the institution suffers several fundamental losses. Carlos III, away from the in-person agenda due to his cancer treatment. And now, his wife, Camilla, 76, who has taken a week off because she is exhausted. The Queen has assumed most of the weight of institutional representation because William also finds himself in complicated conciliation circumstances. The heir covers what he can of his schedule, while he takes care of his wife, Kate, and his three children. The princess will be on leave until after Easter, after abdominal surgery of which no further details have been revealed and after a two-week hospitalization. Kate’s recovery, for now, remains in the greatest information secrecy.

The “hypocrisy” of the dukes

During these four years, the Sussexes have made a lot of media noise in the US. They were looking for privacy and a quiet life, they were looking for a space out of the spotlight. In reality, they have shown us that what they were looking for was to select the focus: in the form of a documentary series on Netflix, in the form of a memoir or in the form of a podcast on Spotify. Royal analyst Angela Levin slides in Daily Mail that in the United States they are getting tired of the “hypocrisy” of the dukes, whose last move was to relaunch and change the name of their website, Archewell.com, and rename it Sussex.com: their new brand image. The constant lamentation of Harry and Meghan in her narrative is not liked by American public opinion, the writer says in the digital. She also doesn’t like the continued attacks on the House.

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