KATE Garraway slammed Prince Harry today after he criticised his dad Prince Charles in an explosive podcast appearance.
The royal told Dax Shepard’s Armchair Expert that Charles had “suffered” growing up and “treated me the way he was treated”.
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His words seem to have only worsened the family’s already fractured relationship, and on Good Morning Britain Kate questioned how significant the damage will be.
She said: “I wonder whether if, when they start to challenge him – which of course is the job of the child, and certainly the job of the teenager – it’s what you’re meant to do, break away in as brutal a way possible, he will have it come back at him.
“He’s always been in the public eye obviously, do you think he almost doesn’t understand that when he says these things, the devastating impact that it’s going to be?”
The broadcaster said Harry faced a potential backlash from people unable to look beyond his privileged upbringing as a Prince.
She continued: “Because we have had people already say: ‘What does he mean talk about the cycle of pain? I grew up in a house where there was abuse, I had all sorts of things happening in my life’.
“Of course we know pain is pain, it might be a different sort of it, but it’s still difficult.
“He is telling his story but it instantly sounds entitled and without empathy, doesn’t he?”
In the podcast interview, Harry said he moved to California to “break the cycle” of pain for wife Meghan and their kids.
The Duke, 36, claimed his dad, 72, “suffered” due to his upbringing by the Queen and Philip.
Harry hailed mum Diana’s “immense impact” but said he didn’t cope with her death until Meghan suggested therapy.
In a sweary chat, he described royal life as a mixture of The Truman Show film and being in a zoo.
The royal also revealed he wanted to quit royal duty when he was in his twenties, saying: “I didn’t want this job.”
He told how he hated his role after the death of his mother Princess Diana and always felt different from the rest of his family.
And he said he moved to the US with Meghan and baby son Archie to escape his “genetic pain”.
The Duke opened up about his mental health struggles in a brutally frank, and profanity-laden, chat with US podcast host Dax Shepard.
He also claimed that he was told “you need help” while he was growing up but rejected it, saying: “There is nothing wrong with me.”
Only weeks after telling Oprah Winfrey in a bombshell interview that his dad was “trapped”, Harry again opened up about their father-son relationship.
He said on the “Armchair Expert” podcast: “I verbalise it, which is, ‘Isn’t life about breaking the cycle’?
“There’s no blame, I don’t think we should be pointing the finger or blaming anybody.
“But certainly when it comes to parenting, if I have experienced some form of pain or suffering because of the pain or suffering perhaps my father or my parents suffered, I’m gonna make sure that I break that cycle so that I don’t pass it on, basically.
“There is a lot of genetic pain and suffering that gets passed on anyway. As parents we should be doing the most that we can to say, ‘You know what, that happened to me, I’m gonna make sure that’s not going to happen to you’.”
Meghan is expecting a daughter — the couple’s second child — this summer with the family now settling in to their new life in California.
Speaking about the parental differences between him and 72-year-old Charles, Harry said: “It’s really hard to do but for me it comes down to awareness.
“I never saw it, I never knew about it, then suddenly I started to piece it all together and go, ‘OK, so, this is where he went to school, this is what happened’.
“I know this bit about his life, I also know that’s connected to his parents, so that means that he is treating me the way that he was treated.
“Which means, ‘How can I change that for my own kids’? And well, here I am, I have now moved my whole family to the US.
“That wasn’t the plan, do you know what I mean? But sometimes you have got to make decisions and put your family first and your mental health first.”
Harry claimed he “always felt different” from his relatives long before he quit royal duty with Meghan, 39, last year.
He said: “It’s the job, grin and bear and get on with it.” He explained: “Privilege does give you blinkers. Mine were never particularly on straight, I have always felt different.”
He went on: “I was in my early twenties and it was a case of, ‘I don’t want this job. I don’t want to be here. I don’t want to be doing this.’”
Elsewhere in the podcast, Harry revealed…
- Prince Harry claims his life is like the film The Truman Show and he is targeted with “vile and toxic abuse” by trolls
- Harry revealed how he and Meghan Markle first met up in a supermarket – and ‘pretended’ they didn’t know each other to avoid attracting attention
- Harry tries to have “compassion” for trolls, but finds it “really hard when you’re on the receiving end”
- The Duke said that life had felt “more free” since his move to LA with Meghan
- Harry doesn’t believe in the “old way of thinking” where girls just “want to be a princess”
- Meghan Markle gave Prince Harry words of wisdom about Royal life – telling him “you can create your own life better than any princess”
The claim will come as a surprise to the Royal Family, as royal sources insist Harry did not tell those closest to him that he wanted to leave — until he met Meghan.
Harry continued: “Look what it did to my mum. How am I ever going to settle down and have a wife and a family when I know that it’s going to happen again because I’ve seen behind the curtain?
“I’ve seen the business model, I know how this operation runs, how it works. I don’t want to be part of this. Then once I started doing therapy the bubble was burst. I plucked my head out of the sand. I said, ‘You are in this position of privilege.
“Stop complaining, stop thinking as though you want something different. Make this different, because you can’t get out. So how are you going to do this differently? How are you going to make your mum proud? How are you going to use this platform to really effect change’?”