Times: Prince Harry is ‘still trying to be relevant’ & ‘important’ in his own right

Prince Harry made a two-day trip to Ukraine and it was important, wonderful and newsworthy. His security-conference speech garnered worldwide headlines and even Donald Trump commented on it. Harry spent time with hundreds of Ukrainian officials, veterans and activists. He did Invictus events and highlighted the hugely important work of the HALO Trust, of which Harry remains a patron. Harry’s Ukrainian visit followed the Sussexes’ wonderful Australian tour the week before, which went so well, it caused weeks of seething from the British media. Speaking of, the Sunday Times published this bizarre column: “Working and royal? Poor Harry, still trying to be relevant” by Polly Vernon. Ah, yes. “He’s irrelevant, we swear, that’s why we obsessively write about him and stalk his every move and scream about every statement he makes!!” Some lowlights:

No one is bothering with Harry!! What’s worse than the whole world hating you? Why — the whole world not being bothered about you one way or the other, of course! No one wants to be irrelevant — but, I suspect, few people want it less than Harry, Duke of Sussex. He is, after all, the man who called his 2023 autobiography Spare, because that awful feeling — of being at best, a back-up plan for the royal establishment, therefore not especially important in your own right — has haunted him for the whole of his life.

Harry’s inconsequential destiny: Yet it would seem that not mattering very much in the end might be Harry’s destiny. I feel more pity for him, writing those words, than I ever have before — give or take the time I watched him, heartbreakingly young and heartbreakingly pale, walk behind his mother’s coffin, obviously. But yeah. A slip slide into insignificance might very well be Harry’s fate. His fate, and that of his wife, Meghan (who, you’d be forgiven for assuming, all evidence considered, has been somewhat passionately set on relevancy for the pair of them, since the day she met him).

Desperate global attention!! Their recent public activities do seem to amount to a series of increasingly desperate, misfiring attempts to prove themselves worthy of the world stage….There was a four-day, faux royal tour of Australia, whose people responded with an overwhelming attitude of “meh”….There was Harry’s tribute to his late grandmother, a wreath sent to St George’s Chapel in Windsor on what would have been Elizabeth II’s 100th birthday last week; a gesture made “privately” and “quietly” according to People magazine, which somehow knew all about it the moment it happened.

Working & royal: Most recently, Harry’s protests, issued only this weekend, that he “will always be part of the royal family” and that (to the argument he is no longer a working royal), he is, in fact, “working and doing the very thing I was born to do”. Which loosely translates as: “I matter! Royal blood still runs through my veins! I exist!”

Ukraine is important: To be fair to Harry, he was in Ukraine at the time of those latest comments, visiting alongside the HALO Trust, the landmine clearing organisation whose profile Princess Diana transformed in her 1997 trip to Angola. The clearing of landmines is a desperately important cause, and Ukraine — a country whose ongoing plight is constantly pushed out of the headlines by other, evolving and unceasingly dramatic international situations — could absolutely do with the spotlight again. In all those respects, Harry did the right thing, oh but: if only he hadn’t made it about him! If only he’d just, you know, done it. Like his mother did that time (and is it horribly cynical to think, perhaps his copying of her is as much about reminding the public of his connection to her as it is the cause itself?).

Trump’s comments: I’d say the most damning, definitive proof of Harry’s creeping irrelevancy came in the form of Donald Trump’s latest put-down of him. “How’s he doing? How’s his wife? Give her my regards,” Trump said, which — though, of course, delivered with irony (assuming Trump does irony? Anyone?) was mild, to the point of gentle, in the grand scheme of Trump’s denigrations. And when Donald Trump no longer considers you significant enough to publicly skewer with playground bully-grade venom… I fear the jig is truly up.

[From The Times]

“Which loosely translates as: ‘I matter! Royal blood still runs through my veins! I exist!’” It’s so telling that these people are so irritated by Harry’s reminder that he’s part of the royal family. I believe the irritation is because he’s putting a mirror up to all of the monarchists and royalists who swear up and down that the family deserves all of the castles, palaces and taxpayer money because they were anointed by god, etc. Either every member of the family has the magic royal blood OR the magic “royal blood” can be determined by picayune interfamily disputes and negated via bureaucratic paperwork. You can’t have it both ways – and this isn’t a f–ing riddle, like Harry is Schrodinger’s Prince. Either Harry has the magic royal blood or he doesn’t. If he doesn’t, what does that say about the rest of the royals? As for the rest of this… if Harry is truly so irrelevant, why not give all of this attention and all of this commentary to Harry’s bald-demon brother? You know, the one who was too lazy to show up for ANZAC Day?

Photos courtesy of Avalon Red, Cover Images.

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14 Responses to “Times: Prince Harry is ‘still trying to be relevant’ & ‘important’ in his own right”

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  1. YankeeDoodles says:

    Do these people have any self-respect ??? I mean. I will tell you the part I find most shocking: most of these sneering, belittling articles are written by women. Doing the work of the lame-ass, pale, stale patriarchy. They sound unhinged and utterly awful.

    • Beth says:

      And I don’t see any mention of Invictus (a key reason for his visit), which is nothing to do with Diana or the rest of the royal family. Btw, which is it – wanting to remind people of his royal blood or of his connection to his mother? This woman is giving unhinged – she’s all over the place.

  2. Dee(2) says:

    I think the most disgusting thing to me and all of these write-ups is the implication that Harry can’t matter anymore simply because he’s not a ” working” royal. Because, what does that say about their thoughts about anyone else? You’re of no importance as a human being unless you’re of ” special” blood? That’s your contributions to the world don’t matter unless they come in the form of a well known lineage?

    I know that the actual truth of the matter is that they’re frustrated that Harry makes the people that has all those things look inconsequential, and has for years. However, their biggest concern is the longevity of the monarchy and the respect for the monarchy which is dwindling and looking very unstable.

    Approaching it as, this person that’s doing good works isn’t actually important because they’re not part of the royal family isn’t the way to appeal to younger generations. I said this the other day about Harry mentioning the Overton window, the shift for the expectations for royals was going to change as generations went on anyway. The people that remember the queen from her early reign are dwindling, and even the people that remember the glamor and interest and begrudging respect of the royals from the ’70s and ’80s are getting older. I’m the generation that grew up with William and Harry, and I could take or leave them, people in their twenties? Teens? Good luck with this message.

  3. Siri says:

    These columnists just come off as ridiculous and out of touch, especially after the Australia and Ukraine trips. It’s very evident that these articles are written with the hope that Harry is reading them. They are just trying to get a rise out of him. I laughed when Harry had that smirk on his face when explaining to some reporter that he is still a member of the royal family. Irrelevant people don’t have 25 articles a day written about them.

  4. Judith in Ottawa says:

    Harry and Meghan are so worthless and sad. But you’ve just made a paycheck off them. Who’s worthless?

  5. Shiela Kerr says:

    Harry has never been at the prove it stage. He just resumed what he was during when he was embedded with his birth family outside of it and this is what causes these unhinged folks to write these articles. They so hoped he would just disappear along with his wife and children and he has not. He has an activist heart and soul which mirrors his mom’s and they all know this. They are irritated because his activism commands global attention.

  6. lorent says:

    Harry’s statement was not him trying to say “I matter, pay attention to me.”

    He was saying, “They can’t negate who I am, stop me from mattering, and doing good work.”

  7. Mario says:

    They literally trained him to do this his entire life. He was prepped and educated to do exactly this, presumably on behalf of the monarch and British government, and he was a very good student, particularly good at that aspect of his job.

    Then the monarch said they didn’t want him to do it anymore (because he wanted to do it part-time to relieve the demands and abuse heaped on his wife and family) so he took his skills elsewhere, where, surprising no one, he is just as good at the work as he was prior, as good as his entire life of preparation set him up to be.

    What did they expect he would do? Become a hatmaker? What did they expect would happen? That he would suddenly lose all of his skill, charm, intelligence, and education because he wasn’t funded or assigned by the Royal Family?

    They wanted him to party, spiral, fail, and come crawling back, embittered and hating Meghan and their children. Sorry, that won’t happen. They can stay crying.

    • Mairzy Doats says:

      They will stay crying, and profitably so, no matter the angle of the story. Some privileged person getting their “comeuppance” is always the main theme. Everyone loves a soap opera with family infighting, money issues, status, and righteous indignation over this and that. Occasionally switch up the villain for a bit before switching back. Billions are made off this formula!

  8. SarahCS says:

    I can’t believe this is in The Times. I know things have shifted radically but it’s still a shock to read this kind of tabloid nonsense in what was once a trusted and respected news source.

    • lucy10 says:

      “I can’t believe this is in The Times. ” This is a Murdoch paper, which is right-wing garbage.

  9. Lover says:

    These writers only make themselves—and by extension the left-behinds—look like the smallest, stupidest, meanest, most cowardly and useless bullies on the planet.

    I’m grateful for good, brave, capable men like Harry doing good work for humanity and fighting the right battles.

  10. Amy Bee says:

    If Harry was truly irrelevant, this lady wouldn’t be devoting precious column inches to him. It’s very easy to ignore him but the British press lacks discipline and the left behind royals are boring.

  11. lucy10 says:

    “I can’t believe this is in The Times. ” This is a Murdoch paper, which is right-wing garbage.