UNTIL Sunday night, the most powerful public statement that’s ever come out of Prince William’s mouth were the eight words: “No, we’re very much NOT a racist family.”
He spat those words out with a cold fury to the media after he was asked about his brother Harry and sister-in-law Meghan’s incendiary claims of Royal racism in their Oprah whine-a-thon two years ago.
Prince William played a blinder the whole weekend, culminating in his speech on Sunday night
Prince Harry skulked inside Westminster Abbey ‘like a naughty schoolboy’
Harry was forced to take his place three rows back from the main players in ‘royal Siberia’
Piers says the weekend was ‘an absolute triumph for the real royals’
Claims for which the Sussex moaners have never produced a shred of evidence, and which Harry recently, and preposterously, tried to say weren’t ever intended to imply any racism.
Since then, the Prince of Wales has maintained a dignified silence as Harry has repeatedly and shamefully trashed him, his wife Catherine, his father Charles, and his stepmother Camilla, in a repugnant tell-all book and Netflix documentary series.
Watch Piers Morgan Uncensored weekdays on Sky 522, Virgin Media 606, Freeview 237, Freesat 217 or on Fox Nation in the US
It won’t have been easy.
No man would prefer standing back and saying nothing while his own sibling torches their whole family in such a disgusting manner.
Indeed, I’m reliably told that William has felt so incensed by Harry’s treachery, he didn’t trust himself not to physically remonstrate with him when they next found themselves in close proximity.
But when that moment happened in Westminster Abbey on Saturday, William didn’t punch his little brother, nor speak to him.
In fact, he didn’t even look at him, as Harry skulked inside like a naughty schoolboy and took his place three rows back from the main players, in the same royal Siberia as his disgraced uncle Prince Andrew.
Instead, William focused on his own hugely significant role at their father’s Coronation, kneeling before King Charles to promise this allegiance as his heir to the throne: ‘I, William, Prince of Wales, pledge my loyalty to you, and faith and truth I will bear unto you, as your liege man of life and limb. So help me God.’
He then touched the King’s crown with his right hand and bent forward to kiss his left cheek.
It was an intensely personal yet also very public display of support and one that moved the King to smile and whisper: “Thank you William.”
‘Surly spoiled brat’
And what was Harry’s contribution to supporting his father?
The surly spoiled brat barely mumbled the oath when the congregation was invited to say it and looked like he found singing the National Anthem in tribute to his dad as pleasurable as sucking on a lemon soaked in Tabasco.
A lip-reader later revealed that Harry spent most of his time during the service complaining to Jack Brooksbank, Princess Eugenie’s husband.
“I’m fed up with the way they treat me,” he apparently said at one stage, adding: “They don’t care.”
We don’t know who he was talking about, but if it was his family then it was a laughably tone-deaf refrain given the way he and his wife have worked so tirelessly to embarrass, shame, and cause damage to the Royals and the Monarchy.
What was very notable was how none of the Royal Family, aside from Princesses Eugenie and Beatrice and their husbands who all entered the Abbey with him, and a fleeting exchange with Princess Anne, wanted anything to do with their Judas.
But what did he expect in return for his despicable disloyalty – to be received with warm hugs, kisses, and high-fives by his grateful relatives?
I’ve no idea why Harry was even at the Coronation for a father he has so relentlessly criticised becoming King of a Monarchy he’s described as a callous racist prison camp.
And he got exactly what he deserved: stuck behind the large red feather plume on Anne’s hat, just as Meghan was hidden behind a candle at the Queen’s funeral.
These things don’t happen by accident.
‘Fork-tongued lickspittles’
It’s the Palace way of telling the world you’ve behaved so badly you’ve abrogated the right to bathe in the reflected glory of a big royal occasion.
Harry couldn’t wait to get away after the service, almost running into a waiting car outside the Abbey – paid for, like his security in the UK, by the British taxpayer – to speed him straight to Heathrow so he could fly back to California.
We were assured this was all so he could see his son Archie on his 4th birthday party, being the wonderfully caring father he is, unlike his own supposedly cold, cruel dad.
But I’ve had three sons celebrate a 4th birthday, and trust me, by the time he got home, long after 9pm, young Archie will have been fast asleep.
No, like everything else in Harry and Meghan’s world, this was all performative self-serving PR nonsense, gleefully spun by their regular fork-tongued lickspittles.
I suspect the real reason he bailed early was because he knows his family hate him for what he’s done to them, and the institution they serve so dutifully, and as the polls show, the public has no time for him now, either, on either side of the Atlantic.
Harry is not just persona non grata, he’s also become his own worst nightmare, an utter irrelevance.
The sad truth for him is that for all his attention-seeking antics before, during and after the Coronation, nobody really cared whether he was there or not.
The world’s eyes were on his father the King, his stepmother, the Queen, and his brother, the next King, his sister-in-law, the next Queen, and their delightful young children.
It was their images plastered over the globe’s newspaper front pages and their faces beamed out from all the TV coverage. It’s them who represent the future.
And when Charles and Camilla came out on the Buckingham Palace balcony to greet the roaring crowds on Saturday, Harry was nowhere to be seen and nobody gave a monkey’s cuss that he was already boarding his flight.
Meanwhile, William played a blinder the whole weekend, culminating in his short but magnificent speech at Windsor Castle concert on Sunday night.
For just under three minutes, he paid heartfelt tribute to his father, evoking the memory of his grandmother Queen Elizabeth II of whom he said: “I know she’s up there, fondly keeping an eye on us. And she would be a very proud mother.”
William shared that pride, telling the crowd how his father had spent over 50 years dedicating himself to serving his country and the Commonwealth, warning of environmental risks to the planet long before it became cool to do so, and supporting over a million young, disadvantaged people with his brilliant Prince’s Trust charity.
‘Wonderfully joyous moment’
Then came the zinger that took me right back to his steely “No, we’re very much NOT a racist family” retort two years ago.
“And perhaps most importantly of all,” William said, “my father has always understood that people of all faiths, all backgrounds, and all communities, deserve to be celebrated and supported.”
In other words, he’s about as far from being a racist as any human being could possibly be.
“Pa,” William said, “we are all so proud of you.”
Then he ended by declaring: “I commit myself to serve you all. King, country, and Commonwealth. God save the King!”
And the crowd screamed back its vociferous support to him and his father.
It was a wonderfully joyous moment of union between the two biggest stars of the Royal firmament and their people.
And it sent the firm message to the watching world: the Monarchy’s in safe hands with two people who, unlike Harry and Meghan, understand selfless royal duty and service, and that the institution’s ability to survive and thrive depends on them bringing the public with them.
This weekend was an absolute triumph for the real royals, and an unmitigated disaster for the bitter rabble-rousing renegades in Montecito.
God save the King!
When Charles and Camilla came out on the balcony, Harry was nowhere to be seen… and nobody gave a monkey’s cuss
A lip-reader revealed Harry spent most of the service complaining to Princess Eugenie’s husband
William’s kiss on the King’s cheek was an intensely personal yet also very public display of support
William’s concert speech was met by a crowd screaming back its vociferous support
It sent a firm message to the watching world: the Monarchy’s in safe hands