Prince Harry: He’s wrong with this delicate verdict on Prince William

Prince Harry makes an uncomfortable verdict on his father and brother in the Oprah interview. Royal connoisseurs do not want to sign this and find that Harry is wrong.

Penny Junor, who wrote the book “Prince William: The Man Who Will Be King”, disagrees with Prince Harry, 36. In an Oprah interview, he said that Prince William, 38, and Prince Charles, 72, were in the system the monarchy could not live freely. Literally he said: “My father and my brother, they are trapped. You are not allowed to go.” A reputation damaging statement that the royal expert does not want to apply.

Prince William will go his way

In an interview with “The Sun” Junor said of the father of three: “I think he absolutely understands what his fate is and he accepts it. He feels it after his grandmother, the Queen.” Queen Elizabeth, 95, suddenly became heir to the throne in 1936, when she was still a princess, because her uncle, King Edward VIII, had abdicated. A lot that she admirably accepts to this day. She is admired by many around the world for the dutiful execution of her office. The same will happen to Prince William, if one continues Junor’s thoughts. Prince Harry’s assumption about a captured William is therefore “absolutely wrong”, she finds.


The turning point came in 2011

Arthur Edwards, who has accompanied the members of the royal family as a photographer for 40 years, also assesses Prince William’s emotional state differently than Harry. He admits that the 38-year-old gave the impression at one point in his life that he actually didn’t want to become a king. But that’s over. “I saw how William became an important statesman,” says Edwards of his impression.


Princess Diana, Prince Harry and Prince William

Junor believes the turning point for Prince William came in 2011. After an earthquake that killed 185 people, he traveled to Christchurch, New Zealand to show his condolences. “I think in New Zealand he recognized the power of the monarchy to help others,” explains the Royal expert. “He discovered that just because he was there and because of himself, he could make a difference.”

Source used: thesun.co.uk

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