Harry and Meghan deserve the same fate as Andrew Windsor
The King acted with decisive authority to strip his brother, Andrew, of his Royal title and evict him from his Windsor mansion. The former Duke of York is now known as Andrew Mountbatten Windsor, and he must vacate Royal Lodge for private accommodation at Sandringham. No formal Letters Patent were issued, nor was parliamentary legislation required; the King’s prerogative sufficed. The action, though severe, reflects a man whose associations – never proven criminal – had become untenable for an institution whose legitimacy rests on public trust.

Yet another challenge persists: the conduct of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex. Harry and Meghan, having stepped back from royal duties in 2020, agreed when they left the family to forgo commercial use of the style ‘HRH’ and the brand ‘Sussex Royal’. They retain their ducal titles, but the late Queen’s directive was unequivocal: royal status must not be commodified.
Their subsequent ventures – Netflix’s Harry & Meghan series, Spotify’s Archetypes podcast, and Harry’s memoir Spare – have leaned heavily on their Sussex identities for marketing and profit. While they do not use ‘HRH’ commercially, the persistent invocation of ‘Duke and Duchess’ on platforms such as sussex.com and in media deals, skirts the spirit of the agreement. The boundary between public duty and private gain has been eroded.
The contrast with Andrew is instructive. His scandals were excruciating, but born of poor judgement and settled civilly without admission of liability. The Sussexes’ output, by contrast, is active and deliberate: a sustained public narrative of grievance, broadcast globally for substantial financial reward. The Oprah interview, Netflix documentary, and Spare detail family tensions, media pressures, and institutional shortcomings. Whether framed as transparency or self-promotion, the content has undeniably damaged the Royal Family.
Stripping Andrew of his princely style was within the King’s gift; removing a peerage such as Duke of Sussex, however, requires an act of parliament. Precedent exists in the Titles Deprivation Act of 1917, which stripped enemy peers during the First World War, but no such mechanism has been invoked in modern times for disloyalty alone. The government has signalled no appetite for legislation targeting the Sussexes, and constitutional experts say that their titles, unlike Andrew’s HRH, are hereditary and protected by law. Revoking them would demand cross-party consensus and risk politicising the monarchy – a step even republican-leaning Labour MPs have declined to pursue.
Still, the King retains levers short of statute. He could further restrict the Sussexes’ access to royal platforms, clarify succession protocols to minimise their Counsellor of State roles, or issue guidance limiting commercial use of titles in official contexts. Andrew’s demotion required no public vote; future clarifications of royal branding could follow the same sovereign path.
The monarchy’s endurance hinges on reputation, trust, and adaptability, not sentiment. The King and the Prince of Wales have rightly prioritised institutional integrity over familial loyalty, as evidenced by Andrew’s swift marginalisation. The Sussexes’ continued prominence – sustained by titles they no longer serve – tests that resolve. Their defenders argue that free speech and financial independence justify their path; monarchists counter that duty, once accepted, carries lifelong restraint. Both positions hold merit, but the Crown cannot indefinitely tolerate the assaults of its honours by those who critique it from afar.
Andrew’s punishment was just and proportionate. The Sussexes’ case is more complex – not criminal, not passive, but a calculated divergence from the late Queen’s vision. Equity does not demand identical treatment, but it does require consistency. Why should quitters who work in the service of nothing and no one but themselves enjoy these honours that are gifts from the nation they left behind and traduced? If the King or his heir wish to fortify the monarchy against future division, they must address the Sussex anomaly with the same clarity applied to Andrew. Not through parliamentary theatre, but through quiet, sovereign authority – reaffirming that the Crown’s prestige is not a private franchise.
The line has been drawn. The institution that has united Britain through centuries of trial now demands that all who bear its titles uphold its purpose – or step fully beyond its shadow. Duty must prevail over disloyalty, restraint over self-promotion. In that balance lies the monarchy’s future, and Britain’s quiet strength.
News
I WATCHED ONE EPISODE… AND SUDDENLY IT WAS 2 A.M.
Mark your calendars: Nicole Kidman’s hit espionage thriller Lioness returns for an unmissable third season this August. Created by Yellowstone’s Taylor Sheridan, the thrilling series follows an elite unit of female operatives tackling high-stakes undercover missions. © Ryan Green/Paramount+. Zoe Saldaña as Joe…
‘ONE DECISION COULD DESTROY EVERYTHING…’
‘COMPELLING’ PSYCHOLOGICAL THRILLER HAS VIEWERS COMPLETELY GRIPPED WITHIN MINUTES… Jo Joyner and Diane Kruger Star in Six-Part Drama Where an A&E Doctor Faces a Heartbreaking Moral Dilemma That Could Destroy a Friendship and Change Lives Forever!A gripping six-part psychological…
VIEWERS SAY THIS TRUE CRIME DOCUMENTARY LEFT THEM COMPLETELY SHATTERED…
WHEN A MUST-WATCH TRUE CRIME DOC SHAKES VIEWERS TO THE CORE… ‘MUST WATCH’ CRIME FILM PERFECT FOR Maternal Instinct FANS NOW STREAMING ON NETFLIX — Praised as One of the Most Shocking and Unsettling Documentaries in Years! Viewers say it…
THIS BRITISH THRILLER SAW THE FUTURE BEFORE ANYONE ELSE…
‘Long Before Today’s Dystopian Hits, This Film Predicted a World on the Brink’ — Michael Caine’s Chilling Masterpiece Is Now Streaming on BBC iPlaye In a career spanning more than seven decades, two Academy Awards, and some of the…
‘EVERYONE IS TALKING ABOUT THIS WEEK’S TV LINEUP…’
MUST-WATCH TV THIS WEEK IS ABSOLUTE CHAOS… From Channel 4’s Gripping Thriller to Netflix’s Harlan Coben Drama, These Shows Are Taking Over Screens and Leaving Viewers Hooked in Minutes!! This week’s TV lineup is packed with must-see entertainment, from…
“KATE MIDDLETON RETURNED TO THE VERY ROYAL EVENT THAT ONCE CHANGED HER FUTURE WITH PRINCE WILLIAM — BUT ONE HIDDEN DETAIL MADE THE MOMENT EVEN MORE EMOTIONAL…”
“18 YEARS LATER, SHE RETURNED TO THE PLACE WHERE EVERYTHING CHANGED.” Kate Middleton’s Garter Day Appearance Carried a Meaning Many Royal Fans Immediately Recognized For most people watching Garter Day at Windsor Castle, the focus was on the pageantry. The…
End of content
No more pages to load