Prince Harry was terrified that Meghan would leave him after her had posted an “angry letter” to the press in 2016 according to a royal commentator. The message was only recently deleted by the royal website.
Royal commentator Angela Levin told GB News: “On the royal website, they removed the information that in 2016 Harry sent this very, very angry letter to the press.It was to say that they were being racist towards Meghan and disturbing her. Now that was when they met.”
She further notes that in 2016 she had gone to interview Harry when an aide told her to be “very very careful because he’s written an angry letter and he’s terrified Meghan’s going to leave him”
She also said: “That’s what the issue was, he was terrified that Meghan was going to leave him. It was love at first sight from his point of view. Now that the letter is gone, he’s very cross because he felt it should be against the press. However, it doesn’t work like that because they’ve moved forward, and they don’t want to have this distancing themselves from Harry and Meghan.”
Meghan and Harry tied the knot at St George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle on May 19, 2018 and Meghan was granted the official title – Duchess of Sussex – on this day.
The statement to the press read from Harry read: “Prince Harry is worried about Ms Markle’s safety. And is deeply disappointed that he has not been able to protect her. It is not right that a few months into a relationship with him that, Ms Markle should be subjected to such a storm. He knows commentators will say this is ‘the price she has to pay’ and that ‘this is all part of the game.’ He strongly disagrees. This is not a game — it is her life and his.”
Meanwhile, in his book Spare, that was released last year, Harry had written: “I showed the essay to Jason (Knauf, former Kensington Palace Communications Secretary), said we needed a course correction immediately. No more debate, no more discussion. Within a day, we had a draft. Strong, precise, angry, honest. I didn’t think it would be the end, but maybe the beginning of the end.”
Harry also explained that the statement angered his father the King and his brother Prince William were both bothered by the statement saying the statement made them “look bad”.
Royal commentator Angela Levin told GB News: “On the royal website, they removed the information that in 2016 Harry sent this very, very angry letter to the press.It was to say that they were being racist towards Meghan and disturbing her. Now that was when they met.”
She further notes that in 2016 she had gone to interview Harry when an aide told her to be “very very careful because he’s written an angry letter and he’s terrified Meghan’s going to leave him”
She also said: “That’s what the issue was, he was terrified that Meghan was going to leave him. It was love at first sight from his point of view. Now that the letter is gone, he’s very cross because he felt it should be against the press. However, it doesn’t work like that because they’ve moved forward, and they don’t want to have this distancing themselves from Harry and Meghan.”
Meghan and Harry tied the knot at St George’s Chapel at Windsor Castle on May 19, 2018 and Meghan was granted the official title – Duchess of Sussex – on this day.
The statement to the press read from Harry read: “Prince Harry is worried about Ms Markle’s safety. And is deeply disappointed that he has not been able to protect her. It is not right that a few months into a relationship with him that, Ms Markle should be subjected to such a storm. He knows commentators will say this is ‘the price she has to pay’ and that ‘this is all part of the game.’ He strongly disagrees. This is not a game — it is her life and his.”
Meanwhile, in his book Spare, that was released last year, Harry had written: “I showed the essay to Jason (Knauf, former Kensington Palace Communications Secretary), said we needed a course correction immediately. No more debate, no more discussion. Within a day, we had a draft. Strong, precise, angry, honest. I didn’t think it would be the end, but maybe the beginning of the end.”
Harry also explained that the statement angered his father the King and his brother Prince William were both bothered by the statement saying the statement made them “look bad”.