Royal staff 'felt sick' before meetings with Sussexes, author claims
Courtiers ‘felt sick’ when they had to work with Meghan and Prince Harry who ‘carried out loyalty tests’ on Palace staff, royal author claims
- Author Valentine Low today claimed Prince Harry was ‘obsessed’ with the media
- Mr Low was speaking to Good Morning Britain about his new book about royals
- In the book, he claims Duke of Sussex carried out ‘loyalty tests’ on Palace staff
- He also claimed on ITV that ex-aides of Sussex had formed a ‘survivors club’
Anxious royal staff reported ‘feeling sick’ before taking part in work with the Sussexes, the author of a new royal book has today claimed.
Staff were apparently wracked by nerves and some even left ‘shaking’ ahead of meetings with Meghan Markle, according to Valentine Low.
Mr Low, a Times royal correspondent and the author of new bombshell royal book Courtiers: the Hidden Power Behind the Crown, today made the claims during an appearance on Good Morning Britain.
He was speaking about his new book, in which it is claimed that a ‘paranoid’ Prince Harry would carry out ‘loyalty tests’ on Palace staff to check if they were still ‘fighting for him’.
Writing in the book, Mr Low said the Duke of Sussex would look for signs of what he dubbed ‘the Palace syndrome’ which showed staff had become ‘institutionalised’ within the royal household.
He claims the Prince identified one ‘key symptom’ as ‘giving in to the media’, something he claims the royal had become ‘obsessed with’ even before meeting Meghan Markle.
It comes as the journalist today told the ITV morning show how palace staff who worked under the couple call themselves the ‘Sussex Survivors Club’.
Staff were apparently raked by nerves and some even left ‘shaking’ ahead of meetings with Meghan Markle, according to Valentine Low. The claim was made today by Times royal correspondent Mr Low, who is the author of new bombshell royal book Courtiers: the Hidden Power Behind the Crown
Mr Low claims the Prince identified one ‘key symptom’ as ‘giving in to the media’, something he claims the royal had become ‘obsessed with’ even before meeting Meghan Markle (pictured here with Prince Harry last month)
Buckingham Palace launched a ‘HR review’ into 2018 claims of bullying by the Duchess of Sussex. However, earlier this year the Palace refused to release the details of the findings,
Michael Stevens, the queen’s treasurer who is known as Keeper of the Privy Purse, said the privately-funded review, which was carried out by an independent law firm, had been set up to examine the handling of the allegations and to improve practices across all the royal households.
Earlier this year, Mr Stevens said: ‘The review has been completed and recommendations on our policies and procedures have been taken forward. But we will not be commenting further.’
The claim was made today by Times royal correspondent Mr Low, who is the author of new bombshell royal book Courtiers: the Hidden Power Behind the Crown (pictured: The book’s front cover)
Representatives for Meghan have repeatedly denied the bullying allegations, and have previously claimed it was in fact her who was bullied.
They also claim she and Prince Harry have been the victims of a ‘calculated smear campaign’.
Today, on Good Morning Britain, Mr Low addressed claims that royal staff who had worked with the Sussexes during their times as frontline royals had formed a group called the ‘Sussex Survivors’ Club’.
The claim was written in his new book, quoting royal sources, who also claimed that staff members labeled Meghan a ‘narcissistic sociopath’ and repeatedly said they felt like they ‘were played.’
Asked by Good Morning Britain host Susanna Reid whether staff had created a ‘group’ called the ‘Sussex Survivors’ Club’, he replied: ‘Absolutely, yes.’
Ms Reid replied: ‘What did they survive?’. Mr Low said: ‘I think it was a very difficult experience for some of them.
‘As I revealed last year, there were allegations that Meghan bullied staff. People talked to me of people being completely destroyed.
‘I’ve heard people at the time, faced with a possible encounter with Meghan, were saying things like ‘I feel sick’ or ‘I’m shaking’ – extraordinary things for an employee to say about the prospect of seeing their employer in half-an-hour.’
However, Mr Low did say there was a way that the courtiers were in some way responsible for the couple’s acrimonious ‘Megxit’ split from frontline royal duties in January 2020.
He said: ‘There is a way in which the courtiers are to blame. So the people around them were doing their best, these were people who believed in Harry and Meghan and they wanted to help.
Writing in the book, Mr Low said the Duke of Sussex (pictured here with Meghan Markle, the Queen, and Charles and Camilla in 2018) would look for signs of what he dubbed ‘the palace syndrome’ which showed staff had become ‘institutionalised’ within the royal household
‘But there were signs early on, in the first year or so of their marriage, there were signs of how unhappy Harry and Meghan were.
‘And no one really did anything about that. No one picked it up, no one flagged it up and there were no big discussions with the most senior courtiers in the institution.’
However, he concluded that he did not think it ‘would have made any difference’.
He added: ‘(Because) what Harry and Meghan wanted and what the Royal family, what the Queen felt able to to give, I don’t think there was ever a meeting point.’
Mr Low also spoke to Good Morning Britain about claims that Prince Harry had conducted ‘loyalty tests’ on staff.
Mr Low said: ‘This was brewing for a long time – before Meghan. Harry had this obsession with the media. He was so very unhappy.’
An excerpt of his book reads: ‘He would use this phrase the whole time, ‘the palace syndrome’, when you won’t fight the battles he wants, because you have been institutionalised.
‘Giving in to the media was a key symptom of whether you had developed it.
‘It was a constant test of loyalty: ‘Are you going to protect me? Or have you just become one of them, who won’t fight for me?’ It was exhausting.’
Mr Low has claimed that matters only got worse once he started dating the Duchess.
He writes in his new book: ‘Harry’s obsession with the media; his sense of frustration that he wasn’t achieving everything that he could; his mistrust of the courtiers in the other households; the constant loyalty tests of his own staff: all of this was there before Meghan arrived on the scene.
‘But after she turned up, it would get significantly worse.’
MailOnline has contacted representatives for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex for comment.
Speaking at the time the wider bullying allegations were first reported, by the Times newspaper, a spokesperson for the Sussex said the claims were based on ‘misleading and harmful misinformation’.
‘The Duchess is saddened by this latest attack on her character, particularly as someone who has been the target of bullying herself and is deeply committed to supporting those who have experienced pain and trauma,’ the spokesperson said in March last year.
Why Harry snubbed William’s offer of a secret summit to heal their rift: Duke of Sussex turned down a crisis meeting with his brother after his bombshell TV interview in which he claimed they were following ‘different paths’
In the final extract from his riveting new book on how the Sussexes’ relationship with palace staff deteriorated, VALENTINE LOW recalls the impact of the couple’s shocking TV interviews — and examines the truth behind their claims . . .
The first intimation that Meghan might be a victim — as well as a possibly rather difficult employer and sister-in-law — came in an ITV documentary.
Filmed in a garden in Johannesburg, during the Sussexes’s 2019 tour of South Africa, she’d spoken to presenter Tom Bradby about how she’d struggled with life in the spotlight, both as a newlywed and as a new mother. He’d then asked her what the impact of all that pressure had been on her physical and mental health.
Looking vulnerable, almost as though she was trying to hold back tears, Meghan said she’d found it hard, and added: ‘Thank you for asking, because not many people have asked if I’m OK. But it’s a very real thing to be going through behind the scenes.’
A preview of Bradby’s documentary was screened for the media while William and Kate were on a tour of Pakistan that October. And, inevitably, the resulting coverage, with its headlines of ‘Meghan: My Struggles’, overshadowed coverage of the last day of the Cambridges’ tour.
VALENTINE LOW: Prince Harry snubbed William’s offer of a secret summit to heal their rift (pictured standing during the unveiling of a statue they commissioned of their mother Diana in 2021)
William and Kate’s team was not happy, it seems, and saw it as a deliberate attempt to knock the couple out of the headlines. Relations between the two households became quite tense.
The documentary had also shown not only Meghan’s evident pain but also how far Harry and William had drifted apart.
Asked by Bradby about the rift between him and William, Harry had chosen not to deny it, but said instead: ‘We are certainly on different paths at the moment . . . As brothers, you know, you have good days, you have bad days.’
William, home after the Pakistan tour, appears to have been taken aback at such a stark portrayal of his brother and sister-in-law’s unhappiness. He realised they were in crisis.
The first intimation that Meghan might be a victim — as well as a possibly rather difficult employer and sister-in-law — came in an ITV documentary. Pictured: Meghan in An African Journey with Tom Bradby
The day after the documentary aired, William WhatsApped his brother to ask if he could come and see him. This put Harry and Meghan into a spin. What should they do?
Initially, Harry was in favour. Then he spoke to his brother again, and asked him whom he would tell.
William explained that he’d have to clear his schedule, which would mean telling his private secretary. At that point, Harry told him: Don’t come.
He was so concerned that William’s team would leak the visit to the Press that he would rather not see his brother than risk it getting into the papers. To everyone who knew what was going on, this was heartbreaking.
It highlighted the dysfunction at the heart of so many royal relationships, and how members of the Royal Family so rarely pick up the phone to speak to each other directly. Instead, they communicate via the apparatus around them. And the result is mistrust and division.
In her interview with Oprah Winfrey in March 2021, Meghan would discuss her mental fragility at greater length.
In her interview with Oprah Winfrey in March 2021, Meghan would discuss her mental fragility at greater length
She talked about the pressure she’d felt from online abuse and the critical media coverage, pressure that she once described in a podcast as ‘almost unsurvivable’. Watching her talk about her pain, and describe how she did not want to live any more, is an uncomfortable experience.
Most people would think such an expression of despair could be rooted only in truth. And yet a succession of decent people, all of whom had believed in Meghan and wanted to make her position work, came to be so disillusioned that they began to suspect that even her most heartfelt pleas for help were part of a deliberate strategy that had one end in sight — her departure. Perhaps, they say, nothing the palace could do was ever going to be good enough.
‘She was looking for examples of us failing her from the beginning,’ believes one former staffer. ‘We were having to prove that the institution would bend over backwards to make her happy.
‘It felt like that wasn’t what she wanted, but that she wanted to be rejected.’
The feeling among like-minded staff was that Meghan wanted to leave a trail of evidence behind, so that when the time came for the couple to leave the monarchy, she would be able to say: ‘Look how they failed to support me. They left me with no choice but to leave.’
Crucially, it was the Queen who took the view that unless they were prepared to abide by the restrictions that applied to working members of the Royal Family, they couldn’t be allowed to carry out part-time official duties. Meghan and The Queen are pictured in 2018
Some staff saw the problem as inextricably linked with the couple’s fury about some of the press coverage, which they felt was sexist and even racist.
It also stung that Meghan had been dubbed Duchess Difficult because of the high staff turnover in their household.
As one source put it: ‘The way I see it, their view of not getting institutional support was that they were not getting permission to blow up the [royal] institution’s relationships with the media.’
Others suspected that, in the end, Meghan wanted to make money for herself. And the only way she could do that was by leaving behind her royal life in the UK and returning to America.
Too cynical? Perhaps. But the sad truth is that the relationships between Meghan and her advisers were in such a sorry state that this is what they genuinely believed.
Some argue that she never really wanted to be accepted by the Royal Family. That may be true.
But it’s also true that if the institution had tried harder, and if she’d been more willing to adapt herself to palace life, she could have been one of the Royal Family’s greatest assets.
The documentary had also shown not only Meghan’s evident pain but also how far Harry and William had drifted apart
The idea that she wanted to be rejected is challenged by her lawyers, Schillings.
Instead, they say she had a ‘clear desire to fit in’.
‘She left her country, career and life in North America to commit herself fully to her new role and made every effort to honour that commitment.’
If the danger signs were there from the beginning, so were the warnings.
The Sussexes’ private secretary Sam Cohen told two key courtiers — the private secretaries to both Prince Charles and the Queen — that if it all went wrong with Harry and Meghan, the palace needed evidence of the duty of care the institution had shown them.
The ‘duty of care’ was crucial: ‘[Sam] was a broken record with them on that,’ said a source.
By the time Meghan gave her interview to Oprah Winfrey, however, the palace had lost the argument over duty of care.
It also stung that Meghan had been dubbed Duchess Difficult because of the high staff turnover in their household
The duchess had hijacked the narrative by making it all about her mental health, which meant everything the palace had done to support the couple — including giving them a team who’d have done anything to help them succeed — was simply forgotten.
Instead, the duchess was able to point out all the times that the organisation had failed her.
One of them was when she went to the palace’s head of HR in January 2019, saying she needed to get help with her mental health issues. She was given a sympathetic hearing but sent on her way, as was inevitable: HR is there to deal with employee issues, not members of the Royal Family.
Meghan would presumably have known that, so what was she doing there in the first place? Laying a trail of evidence would be the cynical answer. So desperate that she did not know where to turn would be the more charitable interpretation.
In the Oprah interview, Meghan also made the startling claim that she went to one of the ‘most senior people,’ saying she needed to go somewhere to get help — only to be told it wouldn’t be ‘good for the institution’.
It is a strange thought: would anyone really say that to a pregnant woman?
Until one hears from the other person in the room, it’s difficult to know what to make of this.
However, the truth remains that Meghan appears to have been in a bad place. And Harry knew she was suffering.
Yet when Oprah asked why he didn’t go to his own family to say his wife needed help, he said: ‘I guess I was ashamed of admitting it to them.’
We can all understand such feelings of shame: mental health can be hard to talk about.
However, there is also something not quite right here.
Since 2016, Harry had devoted much of his energy to Heads Together, a campaign he had launched with William and Kate to try to persuade people to overcome the stigma surrounding mental health.
Years before, he’d decided to seek help himself after suffering his own mental crisis. Could he not have helped his wife do likewise?
And if he couldn’t, he must have met scores of people through Heads Together who could have offered help and support. As one well-informed source said: ‘He would have known exactly where to turn, who to call, what to do.’
Elsewhere in the Oprah interview, Meghan talked warmly of Julia Samuel, the psychotherapist who had been a friend of Princess Diana and remained close to Harry. She had, Meghan said, ‘continued to be a friend and confidante’. Julia Samuel would also, presumably, have been an ideal person for the couple to go to for help.
VALENTINE LOW recalls the impact of the couple’s shocking TV interviews — and examines the truth behind their claims. Pictured: The ‘Fab Four’ on September 10
Analysing Meghan’s interview with Oprah is a complicated business, because some of it simply isn’t true. That doesn’t mean, however, that all of it isn’t true.
One of the moments that is glaringly misleading is when Meghan tells Oprah: ‘When I joined that family, that was the last time . . . that I saw my passport, my driver’s licence, my keys. All that gets turned over. I didn’t see any of that any more.’
In the first six months of her marriage, there had been foreign holidays in Italy, Canada and Amsterdam, to say nothing of the couple’s honeymoon. Then in 2019, Meghan visited Ibiza, France, Italy and New York (twice). It would have been a challenge to do all those trips without a passport.
I’m not going to go through every example in the interview of statements that are untrue, or misleading, such as her claim that they actually got married three days before their wedding. It’s instructive, however, to look at one of Meghan’s central claims: that the palace was not doing enough to stand up for her.
She told Oprah: ‘Not only was I not being protected . . . they were willing to lie to protect other members of the family, but they weren’t willing to tell the truth to protect me and my husband.’
The overriding issue that concerned her was a newspaper story about Kate crying after a bridesmaid’s dress fitting for Princess Charlotte that took place before the wedding.
‘The narrative with Kate — which didn’t happen — was really, really difficult,’ Meghan told Oprah. ‘I think that’s when everything changed, really.’
However, the truth remains that Meghan appears to have been in a bad place. And Harry knew she was suffering (Harry and William pictured in 2018)
The truth is that, after the dress fitting, Meghan had become obsessed with trying to persuade the palace press office to put something out denying the story.
However, they were equally adamant that it would be a serious mistake to start briefing about personal stories relating to differences between members of the Royal Family.
Not only did they not want to brief against other royals, but they feared it would create a precedent, making it harder in future for them to avoid commenting on personal tittle-tattle.
It would also fan the flames of the story, ensuring it continued to fill the pages of the newspapers for several days to come.
This became a major point of contention between Meghan and her media advisers.
On Oprah, Meghan went further than denying the Kate-in-tears story, however. Instead, she said, the reverse had happened.
‘She was upset about something pertaining [to] flower-girl dresses, and it made me cry, and it really hurt my feelings.’
It was not an attractive performance: Meghan had spent months complaining about how her reputation had been smeared in the Press, and now she was doing the same to Kate, who quite clearly was never going to respond.
The story of Kate’s tears was not the first time Meghan had tried to persuade the press office to brief journalists about an issue that was bothering her. The other concerned the departure of a member of staff, whose settlement deal contained a non-disclosure agreement.
Despite the employee being legally obliged to remain silent, the Sussexes — who say they didn’t know about the non-disclosure agreement — repeatedly tried to get their communications secretary Jason Knauf to brief journalists about what Meghan saw as the reason behind the employee’s departure.
Knauf refused, because he disagreed with Meghan’s interpretation of events. He also thought briefing against the individual was wrong.
Looking back on the saga of Harry and Meghan’s rift with the Royal Family, there are still questions to be asked.
Were the senior courtiers in the royal institution — Prince Charles’s private secretary Clive Alderton; and the Queen’s, Edward Young — unaware of Meghan and Harry’s deepening unhappiness?
Or were they burying their heads in the sand? Did they let their personal dislike of Meghan prevent them from seeing the very obvious dangers that lay ahead?
Looking back on the saga of Harry and Meghan’s rift with the Royal Family, there are still questions to be asked
One former palace insider believes the way the developing crisis was handled was ‘incompetent beyond belief’.
‘I think Meghan thought she was going to be the Beyoncé of the UK,’ said the insider. ‘Being part of the Royal Family would give her that kudos.
‘What she discovered was that there were so many rules that were so ridiculous, she couldn’t even do the things she could have done as a private individual . . .
‘It required the decision-makers to sit around a table and say: ‘OK, what are we going to do about this? What do you need to feel better? And what can we give?’
The situation wasn’t helped by Harry and Meghan’s deteriorating relationship with both Young and Alderton.
Meghan apparently saw the Queen’s private secretary as ‘an inflexible, bureaucratic figure’ and Harry was just as dismissive of the two senior courtiers as she was.
So another view is nothing could have saved the situation. The two sides were just too far apart.
But the Sussexes wanted their freedom to make money AND to dip their toes into U.S. politics. There was no way to reach an agreement on that point (picture 2021)
Crucially, it was the Queen who took the view that unless they were prepared to abide by the restrictions that applied to working members of the Royal Family, they couldn’t be allowed to carry out part-time official duties.
But the Sussexes wanted their freedom to make money AND to dip their toes into U.S. politics. There was no way to reach an agreement on that point.
There is one final thought on this, from a surprising source: perhaps the Sussexes’ departure from the country and the Royal Family was not the untrammelled disaster so many think it was.
One courtier, who knows Harry and remains upset about what he and Meghan did, said: ‘Part of me thinks Meghan did Harry the greatest kindness anyone could do, which was to take him out of the Royal Family, because he was desperately unhappy in the last couple of years of his working life.
‘We knew he was unhappy, but we didn’t really know what the solution would be. She came along and found the solution.’
Adapted by Corinna Honan from Courtiers: The Hidden Power Behind The Crown, by Valentine Low, to be published by Headline on Thursday at £20. © Valentine Low 2022. To order a copy for £18 (offer valid to 15/10/22; UK P&P free on orders over £20), visit mailshop.co.uk/books or call 020 3176 2937.
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