![]() ![]() The Mail appears to have simply aggregated quotes from around the British press. The Daily Mail story states that Arbiter made his comments to The Sun while Phillips made his comments to U.K. If Harry, his ghost writer and his editor believed that Arbiter and Phillips had made their comments in conversation with one another, they perhaps should have read the article more carefully. "And Her Majesty will doubtless be feeling very let down right now, by a grandson she doted on." "They can expect no mercy from those who like things just as they are and, to be honest, they'll get short shrift from the many activists who have endured a lifetime of calumny from the media, largely without complaint."Īrbiter was quoted in the same article, but said: "The Queen will bear this latest insult with the stoicism with which she has faced every other challenge in her life. They will join the rest of us in the trenches. He said: "Once outside the royal enclosure they will no longer enjoy the deference that Harry, at least, has had all his life. Harry's words also appear to remove the context from Phillips' statement, which was predicting how some members of the public from both sides of the political divide would react. Prince Harry's reputation is on cusp of "spontaneous combustion" in U.S.Royals "may be seething but will not sue" Prince Harry over privacy.Prince Harry's book described as "Freudian nightmare" over penis cream.Newsweek has approached representatives of Harry and publisher Transworld Penguin Random House for comment. But I haven't been named, it's by interpretation." There's enough interpretation and misquoting in this world without adding to it. I don't know what Trevor Phillips meant when he wrote what he wrote all I know is what is attributed to me is rubbish and an apology from Penguin Random House would be useful."Īsked whether Harry should apologize, Arbiter added: "I think an apology all round because they got it wrong and I've been accused of something I never did. "They should have done a bit of fact checking because I never said anything of the sort. ![]() However, the Daily Mail's story, published on January 10, 2020, actually attributes the "no mercy" quote to a different commentator, British broadcaster and former politician Trevor Phillips.Īrbiter told Newsweek: "Its attributed to an ex-press secretary. These men and women saw me as an existential threat."Īlthough the book does not identify the former press secretary by name, Dickie Arbiter, who was the late Queen Elizabeth's press secretary from 1988 to 2000, believes it is a reference to him. The language of war? Clearly this was more than simple anger. Dickie Arbiter, inset, the Queen's former press secretary, claims Harry's book Spare wrongly attribute quotes to him. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle visit the Andalusian Gardens, in Rabat, Morocco, on February 25, 2019. ![]()
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