Prince Harry and his wife Meghan stunned the British monarchy on
Wednesday by quitting as front-line members -- reportedly without first
consulting Queen Elizabeth II.
In a shock
announcement, the couple said they would spend time in North America and
rip up long-established relations with the press.
Media
reports said the Duke and Duchess of Sussex made their bombshell
statement without notifying either Harry's grandmother the monarch, or
his father Prince Charles.
The surprise news follows a
turbulent year for the couple, who have openly said they have struggled
in the spotlight and grown apart from Harry's brother Prince William.
They have also reacted badly to negative news coverage.
"We
intend to step back as 'senior' members of the royal family and work to
become financially independent, while continuing to fully support Her
Majesty The Queen," they said in a statement released by Buckingham
Palace.
"We have chosen to make a transition this year
in starting to carve out a progressive new role within this
institution," they added.
"We now plan to balance our time between the United Kingdom and North America."
The announcement appeared to catch the royal family by surprise.
Buckingham
Palace put out a second statement an hour and 40 minutes later, saying
discussions with Harry and Meghan were "at an early stage".
"We
understand their desire to take a different approach, but these are
complicated issues that will take time to work through," it added.
It was understood that the mood in Buckingham Palace was one of disappointment and even, according the the BBC, "hurt".
Harry,
35, and Meghan, 38, are among the most senior, core members of the
royal family, and, along with William and his wife Kate, seen as the
monarchy's future.
The pair spent six weeks over
Christmas in Canada after speaking of the pressure of being in the
spotlight following their fairytale wedding at Windsor Castle in May
2018 and son Archie's birth 12 months later.
They
skipped the royal family's traditional Christmas at Sandringham, the
sovereign's private estate in eastern England, spending the festive
season instead with Meghan's mother Doria Ragland.
Rumours
that all was not well with the Sussexes surfaced in October when Harry,
sixth in line to the throne, admitted that he and William were "on
different paths" and had good and bad days in their relationship.
"We
don't see each other as much as we used to," he told ITV television's
Tom Bradby, whom Harry and William have grown to trust with interviews
over the years.
Asked by Bradby if she was "not really
OK" and life had "really been a struggle" becoming a mother while living
under intense media scrutiny, Meghan appeared emotional and replied
simply: "Yes."
Bradby said Wednesday that he sensed he was witnessing "a long, sad farewell to this royal life".
"This is a new war of the Windsors -- and it's not over yet."
In
October, Harry issued a stinging statement about general tabloid
coverage and launched the first of a handful of lawsuits against
newspaper publishers.
Asked if Meghan was facing the
same media pressures as his mother Diana, who died in a car crash in
Paris in 1997 while pursued by paparazzi, Harry told Bradby: "I will not
be bullied into playing a game that killed my mum."
On a new website, the couple said they would no longer take part in the royal rota.
The
rota system is an established arrangement between the palace and the
press whereby news organisations take it in turns to cover events and
then share the pictures, text and video with everyone in the pool,
avoiding the mass media scrambles of the past.
Instead
the couple will attempt to invite only "specialist", "grassroots",
"credible" and "young, up-and-coming" media to events.
Queen
Elizabeth's former press secretary Dickie Arbiter told Sky News
television that the couple's approach was "a succession of doing things
their own way -- which is the wrong way".
"Sometimes there's good press; sometimes there's bad press. You take the rough with the smooth."
Currently,
Harry and Meghan's costs are largely funded from Charles' private
income from the heir to the throne's estates, while the police foots
their security bill.
Former BBC royal correspondent
Peter Hunt told Channel 4 television that royals thinking they can earn
money in a side career "has always ended in tears".
Newspaper headlines on Thursday included The Sun's "Megxit", saying the couple had sparked civil war at the palace.
"They didn't even tell the Queen," said the Daily Mirror, while the Star said: "The Royal formerly known as Prince".
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