Royal expert reveals the real reason Prince Harry and Meghan Markle are disliked by Americans 

By Daily Mail (U.S.) | Created at 2024-12-28 13:24:42 | Updated at 2024-12-29 04:01:21 14 hours ago
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Prince Harry was once one of the most popular members of the Royal Family, but following his decision to leave and publicly criticise the institution, his reputation has plummeted.

In October 2019, before he left, Harry was liked by 71 per cent and disliked by 22 per cent of the British public. But data from last August shows that only 30 per cent of people now hold a favourable opinion of him, while 60 per cent disapprove, according to data from Statista.

His spectacular fall from grace comes after he fired a series of broadsides at his own family in the form of a bombshell interview with Oprah in 2021, a Netflix docuseries in 2022 and most importantly, his tell-all memoir Spare in 2023.

However, in contrast to the British public, Americans still remain fairly positive about the prince, with more than half of them (53 per cent) reporting favourable views, according to YouGov.

But things could be changing, according to Ingrid Seward, the editor-in-chief of Majesty magazine and author of royal biographies including the recent My Mother & I.

The royal expert told The Standard'I give a lot of talks to Americans and they all dislike Harry and Meghan. They hate that they let the Queen down.' 

Meanwhile, other insiders have suggested that many people now simply don't think about them and have no opinion either way.

Kinsey Schofield, an LA-based royal expert and host of the To Di For Daily podcast, told the paper that she thinks a lot of Americans will agree with Eric Trump - the son of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump - when he says they don't care about Harry.

A royal expert has claimed Harry and Meghan are disliked by Americans because 'they hate that they let the Queen down'. Pictured together on the balcony of Buckingham Palace in 2018

Meghan made a solo appearance at a glitzy event in Beverly Hills on December 4 to celebrate her friend Tyler Perry getting an award

Prince Harry and his wife Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, in 2018, before they abandoned Britain and the Royal Family to move to California

She said people have lost interest in Harry, 40, and Meghan, 43, after realising they had given them too much credit over the years.

However, it now appears a new PR strategy has been adopted by the couple as they attempt to revive their reputation.

Royal expert Ingrid Seward says Americans now dislike Harry and Meghan

They have increasingly been appearing at events separately, sometimes in different countries.

It has led to speculation that they have ‘professionally separated’, due to their differing interests, as Harry focuses on charity work and Meghan on their commercial interests.

But Harry laughed off the tittle-tattle about his and Meghan's separation last week, saying it was just the latest in a long line of rumours: 'Apparently we’ve bought or moved house 10, 12 times. We’ve apparently divorced maybe 10, 12 times as well. So it’s just like, what?'

Meghan's decision to wear a revealing red dress at a gala for the Children's Hospital Los Angeles in October also drew criticism, with one writer claiming she had gone from 'Duchess to D-list'

Phil Dampier, a royal correspondent of nearly 40 years and author of Royally Suited: Harry and Meghan in Their Own Words, told The Standard that Meghan has been keeping a fairly low profile until she’s ready to launch American Riviera Orchard.

The long-awaited lifestyle brand was launched nine months ago, with a glitzy video, an Instagram page and a website.

But since then, fans have been kept in suspense with little new information, except for the brand's suspiciously royal logo and space to sign up for a 'waitlist'.

The Duke of Sussex laughed off the rumours about his and Meghan's separation while onstage during The New York Times Dealbook Summit 2024, New York, on December 4

Harry was once one of the most popular members of The Firm but has had a spectacular fall from grace. Pictured with his family on July 10, 2018

Meghan's decision to wear a revealing red dress at a gala for the Children's Hospital Los Angeles in October drew criticism 

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex dramatically moved across the pond after quitting as senior royals and leaving Britain in January 2020. Harry and Meghan are pictured with Charles and Camilla in 2018

Harry made many attacks in his memoir, including calling his mother-in-law, Queen Camilla, 'dangerous' and a 'villain' and alleging she had 'sacrificed him' to improve her reputation

In March 2021, the Sussexes appeared on Oprah following 'Megxit' and alleged that some members of the royal family questioned 'how dark' their child's skin might be when he's born 

At the end of 2022, Harry and Meghan's docuseries came out, where Prince Harry claimed they had to quit royal duties to 'protect' his wife and said there was a 'huge level of unconscious bias' in the Royal Family 

Prince Harry and Meghan Markle now enjoy life at their $14.7million home in Santa Barbara, California

So far, all that the public has seen is a few jars of homemade jam and dog biscuits bearing the company logo on social media that were handed out to high-profile friends.

And it is not just their failing reputation with the public the California-based parents of two have to deal with, their standing in Hollywood circles also seems to be depleting.

Jane Owen, a renowned Hollywood publicist, told The Standard that despite being given every opportunity to shine in Hollywood they have done 'worse than nothing', as she claims they have 'actively destroyed' the opportunities they were given.   

Their latest Netflix venture, a show about the upper-class game of Polo, came out this week on Netflix, although the viewing figures have not yet been released. 

But the horse and mallet documentary has been met with bemused reviews, with the Guardian labelling it an 'unintentionally hilarious profile of the world’s stupidest sport'.

The Daily Mail's Jane Fryer gave it one star, calling the 'ghastly world' of the wealthy Polo players 'flat, plodding and really rather boring'.

Netflix executives are already grumbling about how little the prince appears in the show - making only the odd cameo appearance.

Meanwhile Meghan’s cooking show for the streaming platform is expected to launch at the same time as the long-awaited American Riviera Orchard finally launches. 

A well-placed LA insider told The Standard that people in Hollywood are 'definitely wary' of working with them right now.

Harry and Meghan's blink-and-you-miss-it appearance in Polo comes at the beginning of episode five, when Harry plays a charity polo match for his non-profit Sentebale

Meghan planted a kiss on Harry after his team the Royal Salute Sentebale won the charity match featured in episode five of the docu-series

The late Queen and Meghan on the balcony of Buckingham Palace for the 100th Anniversary of the Royal Air Force on July 10, 2018 

The couple's popularity also recently came under fire when a German documentary aired at this month accused the couple of hypocrisy while enjoying an 'elitist' lifestyle in the US.

The programme entitled 'Harry: The Lost Prince' includes damning criticism of the couple's attempts to build a new life for themselves as charity activists and campaigners since leaving the Royal family.

It takes a dig at the couple by detailing how their much-publicised visits to poverty-stricken countries such as Nigeria and Colombia sits uneasily with Meghan's love of expensive designer clothes.

One stinging voice in the documentary is former soldier Ben McBean, who lost his left arm and had his right leg amputated above the knee after being seriously injured by a landmine blast in Afghanistan in 2008.

McBean, who shared a flight home from Afghanistan with Harry, did not hold back in criticising the prince over his revelations about his family in his bombshell memoir and in his Netflix show.

The veteran soldier said: 'I just thought, with him kind of whinging about his family and he was saying something about his brother pushing him over or something like that, I was just like, "Mate, just leave it out".

'You and your brother had a little fisticuffs…but family's family, you know.

'If one of my friends fell out with his partner and started posting things on social media and saying my ex is this and that, I'd have told him to shut up as well.'

The German documentary also points the finger at Harry and Meghan for inevitably trading off their former Royal roles by seeking to make money to support their lifestyle.

A recent German film titled 'Harry: The Lost Prince' includes expert commentary on the allegations the Duke of Sussex made against his family in his book Spare 

The documentary extensively quoted British Royal reporters and experts, talking about the gulf between their supposedly noble work and their luxury lifestyle

Harry threw around many accusations against the royal family in Spare, along with alleging that he had a physical fight with his brother and heir to the throne, Prince William. Pictured: William, Charles and Harry in 2014

Princess Catherine and Prince William do an awkward looking walkabout with Prince Harry and Meghan at Windsor Castle following the death of the Queen on September 10, 2022

The bombshell Germany documentary runs a fine-toothed comb through Harry and Meghan's work with their charity Archewell Foundation

Queen Elizabeth II and the Duchess of Sussex at the opening of the new Mersey Gateway Bridge, in Widnes, Cheshire, on June 14, 2018

In contrast, Harry's journey to London for the WellChild awards for ill children in September was widely praised. Pictured speaking to Lewis Connett, aged 11

It even pours scorn on them for 'failing' to mix with wealthy neighbours in the celebrity enclave of Montecito of California, where they have made their home with children Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet.

But Harry and Meghan may be most uncomfortable with the documentary reminding viewers that they had admitted to spending just one hour a week working for their charity Archewell.

Richard Mineards, one of the couple's neighbours in Montecito, also appears, talking about the exclusive lifestyle that the couple enjoy in the area.

He says: 'It doesn't come cheap. I mean…most houses are about eight or nine million dollars.'

But he added: 'I personally don't think that Meghan is an asset to our community… She doesn't really go out or get involved with the community.

'Harry has to a certain extent, because he's quite jolly…but Meghan doesn't seem to get seen anywhere…. And you don't see him either.'

Although Harry's journey to London for the WellChild awards for ill children in September was widely praised, those type of successes now seem to be quite rare.

Speaking about Harry and Meghan's time since leaving Britain, royal author Angela Levin said earlier this year Americans are getting fed up with the couple's 'hypocrisy' and whinging. 

She told The Sun: 'I think endless moaning puts off Americans because they like people who are go-getters rather than those who blame everyone else.

'They also don't like the attacks on the Royal Family especially as they so loved and admired the Queen.'

Harry and Meghan's unpopularity was made clear when they were mocked and humiliated in an episode of South Park in 2023 

Their unpopularity was made clear when they were mocked and humiliated in an episode of South Park last year.

The satirical cartoon launched a series of attacks against the couple in an episode of the show, which was entitled The Worldwide Privacy Tour and depicted the couple embarking on a publicity blitz to promote the Prince's new book, Waaagh.

At one point, they were seen stepping off the plane holding signs which said 'we want our privacy' and 'stop looking at us'.

After the show aired, reports surfaced suggesting that Meghan had been left 'upset and overwhelmed' by the couple's less-than-flattering portrayal.

The Sussexes previously took an American popularity battering in July after Harry triggered an angry backlash when he picked up the Pat Tillman Award, which is typically given to unsung heroes.

More than 76,000 people signed a petition demanding the decision was reversed, while Harry came under increasing pressure to hand the trophy back. 

Tillman's own mother Mary slammed the decision to give him the award that honours her dead son, labelling Harry 'a controversial and divisive individual'. 

A poll of 1,500 Americans at the time appeared to back her with 38 per cent saying it was wrong for Harry to be given the award.

Of those asked by polling agency Redfield and Wilton, only 21 per cent came out in support of the prince. The other 41 per cent said they 'didn't know'.

Prince Harry courted controversy when he accepted the Pat Tillman Award in July 

A beaming Meghan Markle places her hand on Harry's leg as the couple pose for the cameras at the glitzy award ceremony in Los Angeles that later became shrouded in controversy 

The award is named after Pat Tillman, an NFL player who gave up his lucrative career to enlist in the army in the wake of 9/11. He died in Afghanistan in 2004 

Mary Tillman, the fallen NFL star-turned-veteran's mother, said she was 'shocked' her son's award would go to 'such a controversial and divisive figure' like Harry

The current attitude the public has for the Sussexes seems to be quite the contrast to when they were first greeted when they moved to America with much fanfare in 2020.

The Oprah Winfrey interview in 2021 was watched by more than 17 million Americans and was lauded in the US press, in contrast to Britain.

However public opinion of the pair has been appearing to wane ever since the release of Harry's controversial memoir Spare in January 2023.

Slowly but surely, the court of American public opinion seems to be turning against the Sussexes.

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