As Prince Harry goes through the legal channels to get the adequate protection he and his family need while in the UK, his father has offered him an olive branch.
Prince Charles has apparently reached out to Prince Harry and Meghan Markle and invited them along with their young children — Archie and Lilibet Diana — to stay with him.
Prince Charles hopes that the Sussex couple will accept his offer, travel to London, and take part in Queen Elizabeth II‘s upcoming celebration for her Platinum Jubilee or 70 years on the British throne.
While Prince Harry sorts things out with the Home Office, it seems that an issue has arisen with Prince Charles’s invite/plan to lure the independent royals back to London.
Royal expert Rebecca English explained that Prince Charles’s plan to convince Prince Harry and potentially his family to come to stay with him while in the UK has a huge hole in it.
If Prince Harry visits his father, his stay will be brief because the future king of England resides in many unsafe homes, according to the standards and requirements laid out by his legal team.
The royal correspondent explained that Prince Charles’s Highgrove and Clarence House residences are open to the public, which implies that they are not safe and Prince Harry and his family cannot get the privacy they need.
The royal author said it is a weird situation that can be remedied if Prince Charles is willing to meet his youngest son in another country like Scotland.
She shared: “I was explaining to someone about it this week it’s really weird. I know it seems like they live in massively grand houses, but these houses aren’t actually terribly private.”
The writer went on to reveal: “Charles’s home at Highgrove is actually open to the public, and Clarence House is also his office, and Harry has Frogmore, which is a perfectly good home of his own.”
She concluded by: “So unless they were going up to maybe somewhere like Birkhall, which is pretty private, I can’t see him staying with him for particularly long even if he does [come].”
The legal fight between Prince Harry and the British government is going to the distance because both parties will not back down.
Prince Harry, who does not want to put his family at risk, has vowed to march on with the lawsuit, hoping the highest court will side with him.
Meanwhile, the government has made it clear their protection and service cannot be bought and will go toe-to-toe with the British prince in court.