The tones of a large part of the British press against the rebel prince Harry and his wife Meghan are becoming
increasingly furious, after the explicit attacks directed by the US by the Duke of Sussex on the rest of the royal family
- primarily on his older brother and heir to the throne William - in the last three episodes of the 'Harry and Meghan' docuseries.
Aired yesterday on Netflix in the UK, it has been available to a gigantic global audience for a few days.
Leading the way in the Kingdom are the reference tabloids of right-wing populism - from Rupert Murdoch's Sun to the Daily Mail, already sued and defeated in court by the Sussexes in recent months -, but also establishment titles such as the Times or the pro-conservative Daily Telegraph: all
convinced that in one way or another this time the court must break the rule of official silence ("never complain, never explain") and "respond to the outrage"
by going beyond the unofficial tips with which generally limits itself to trying to guide the national media on the more thorny events of the Windsor house.