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New Kate Middleton picture proves Prince Harry wrong

A new photo of the Princess of Wales has shown up Prince Harry’s book revelations in the most satisfying way.

The royal family has largely come through this storm on a relatively even keel. Picture: Getty Images.
The royal family has largely come through this storm on a relatively even keel. Picture: Getty Images.

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Hospitals are generally not places you find a giddy crowd. Terrible coffee, hard chairs and hand sanitiser for days, sure, but a swarm of phone-wielding, cheering people trying to blag a selfie with a couple of visitors? Nope.

Except that was exactly the scene that greeted William and Kate aka the Prince and Princess of Wales on January 12 when they went to open the new Royal Liverpool University Hospital.

Now, this sort of outing is exactly the bread and butter of royalty, the shaking of hands and the Opening of Something. But, here’s why this moment matters: this was the first time they had stepped out in public since Prince Harry’s corrosive Spare had been released.

Prince William and Princess Kate visit the Royal Liverpool University Hospital two days after the official release of <i>Spare</i>. Picture: Bruce Adams-WPA Pool/Getty Images
Prince William and Princess Kate visit the Royal Liverpool University Hospital two days after the official release of Spare. Picture: Bruce Adams-WPA Pool/Getty Images

By the time the Wales walked through the hospital’s doors, the world knew that the prince had once clobbered his younger brother in an altercation over Meghan, Duchess of Sussex’s treatment of their shared staff and that the princess had had the audacity to not want to share her lip gloss with her sister-in-law.

The first US TV interview where Prince Harry discussed <i>Spare</i>. Picture: CBS via Getty Images
The first US TV interview where Prince Harry discussed Spare. Picture: CBS via Getty Images

Moreover, by the time the couple had rolled into the northern city, the royal family had been coming under sustained fire by the one-man PR Panzer division that was Prince Aitch, with his non-stop, seemingly never ending series of interviews with everyone from US 60 Minutes to What’s Up Albuquerque! (Okay, I made that last one up, but you get my point).

The crowd response to the Prince and Princess of Wales at Liverpool hospital was warm and supportive in the wake of <i>Spare</i>’s release. Picture: Bruce Adams-WPA Pool/Getty Images
The crowd response to the Prince and Princess of Wales at Liverpool hospital was warm and supportive in the wake of Spare’s release. Picture: Bruce Adams-WPA Pool/Getty Images

Sure, Spare is largely lacking any real gotcha moments or truly shocking incidents aside from that 2019 altercation when Harry’s necklace was fatally yanked by Willy (a moment of royal on royal violence that doesn’t quite match Elizabeth I having her cousin Mary Queen of Scots’ block knocked off). But still, the book’s contents have bruised Buckingham Palace, right at the point in time when they want everyone to be getting excited about the coronation.

Broadly speaking, Spare is a book that paints a fairly incriminating picture of not only the characters of the HRHs but also of the culture inside the palace gates. Charles is an emotionally negligent parent, William is stippled with jealousy and ego, and Kate is something of a prima donna who chucks a wobbly a few days out from the Sussex wedding over bridesmaid dresses.

Meanwhile, off the actual institution, Aitch tells of a viperous outfit where rival offices brief the media against each other and there is enough scheming going on to impress the most devoted disciple of Machiavelli.

By the time the couple visited Liverpool hospital, the royal family had been coming under sustained fire by the one-man PR Panzer division that was Prince Aitch. Picture: Bruce Adams-WPA Pool/Getty Images
By the time the couple visited Liverpool hospital, the royal family had been coming under sustained fire by the one-man PR Panzer division that was Prince Aitch. Picture: Bruce Adams-WPA Pool/Getty Images

With Harry’s bookish blood-letting, he has dealt the first real reputational blow to the prince and princess in years, if ever.

Sure, over the years Kate has come in for an occasional pasting for her supposedly workshy ways, with she and William having only turned their soft hands to full-time royal work in 2017, but since then has been something of a sacred cow, a sort of beatific, adored creature whose ability to turn out heirs and spares and smile ever-so-nicely has won over the UK. (And really, what is the job of the future Queen but to ensure the line of succession, charm pensioners in the home counties and do her bit to prop up the popularity of pastels?)

But Harry’s memoir offers a much less flattering view of the 41-year-old. She and William, we are told, moved place cards at the Sussexes’ wedding, to the newlyweds’ chagrin; she got stroppy about those dresses at exactly the point that Meghan could have done with a huge G&T, dealing with the fallout from father Thomas Markle being caught staging paparazzi pics. Oh, and she is a bit frosty, getting upset when the former actress told her she had “baby brain.”

Kate and William got a great reception despite the negative portrayal of them by Prince Harry. Picture: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
Kate and William got a great reception despite the negative portrayal of them by Prince Harry. Picture: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
Kate and William got a great reception despite the negative portrayal of them by Prince Harry. Picture: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images
Kate and William got a great reception despite the negative portrayal of them by Prince Harry. Picture: Christopher Furlong/Getty Images

Hardly devastating stuff but by far and away the most negative portrayal we have seen of the princess since she became a bonafide HRH.

And that brings us back to the hospital scene in Liverpool earlier this month. It would be easy to imagine a much more muted reception, gawking, curious onlookers and maybe even an awkwardly yelled question about Harry from the throng.

Instead, William and Kate were met by, according to reports, hundreds of patients and staff that had gathered to catch a glimpse of the duo doing nothing more extraordinary than waving.

If anyone in Team Wales had been worried about the sort of reception the couple might receive, then the jubilant scenes that greeted them should have cheered them up no end.

At one point, 81-year-old Sylvia Staniford gripped the prince’s hand and told him. “Keep going, keep going. Scousers love you.” William’s response? A smile and “Yes, I will.”

(Mrs Staniford told the Telegraph later: “Of course that was a reference to Harry. He knew what I was talking about.”)

Overall the Waleses are sitting on their lowest net positive numbers in the last 12 years. Picture: Jon Super-WPA Pool/Getty Images
Overall the Waleses are sitting on their lowest net positive numbers in the last 12 years. Picture: Jon Super-WPA Pool/Getty Images

(Hardly on the same level, but also interesting, is the fact that last Sunday, as Charles walked to church at Sandringham, a surprising number of members of the public, based on photos, had traded their warm beds to stand in the winter weather to spy the King.)

What the outing in Liverpool showed was that despite Spare’s best efforts to take the House of Windsor down a few pegs, the royal family has largely come through this storm on a relatively even keel.

That’s not to say that Harry’s autobiography hasn’t taken the sheen off.

The most recent polling done by those brave souls at YouGov found that, post Spare’s release, 68 per cent of people had a positive view of the princess, down from 78 per cent this time last year. However, the current lower figure is in line with Kate’s previous approval ratings.

What is more noteworthy is the change in percentage of people with an unfavourable view of her as of this month (18 per cent) - a significant jump from eight per cent last year.

Likewise William, who is viewed negatively by 21 per cent of Brits, as opposed to the nine per cent recorded in September last year.

Overall, for both of the Waleses, they are sitting on their lowest net positive numbers (the total positive minus the total negative) in the last 12 years.

With Harry’s bookish blood-letting, he has dealt the first real reputational blow to the prince and princess in years, if ever. Picture: Angela Weiss/AFP
With Harry’s bookish blood-letting, he has dealt the first real reputational blow to the prince and princess in years, if ever. Picture: Angela Weiss/AFP

Of course, this is not exactly great news for the Prince and Princess of the School Run or anyone whose professional fortunes are tied to their success (they are currently looking for a new social media whizkid if you know anyone) but nor is this anything like the devastation left in the wake of the brutal 90s War of the Waleses.

In 1994, after now-King Charles admitted to having cheated on wife Diana, Princess of Wales, one poll found that two thirds of people thought he was unfit to rule. As of this month, nearly the same portion (62 per cent) of Brits say they have a positive view of him, a slight increase since before the publication of Spare, as opposed to only one third (32 per cent) who have a negative one.

My point is, the history of the crown is a history of the (literally) ancient House weathering innumerable crises, controversies and the occasional family member going off to marry a dodgy German. Yet it has endured, approval ratings ultimately rebounding.

Since the beginning of December, when Netflix decided that the world needed six hours of watching Harry and Meghan marinate in their victimhood on camera, the royal family has been having a right time of it, for sure, but ultimately, this is a blip in the extraordinarily long history of the British crown. For better or worse, they are the cockroaches of monarchy, having survived the seemingly unsurvivable for centuries, while their various European cousins were being politely deposed or done away with in brutal fashions.

The King is generally held to be a classical music nut but right about now, if he’s feeling perky and Queen Camilla is on her third glass of Shiraz, it’s probably time to put a bit of Aretha Franklin on the Clarence House record player and awkwardly bop to the only appropriate tune right now. To misquote Ms Franklin, the Crown will survive.

Daniela Elser is a writer and a royal commentator with more than 15 years’ experience working with a number of Australia’s leading media titles.

Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/entertainment/celebrity-life/royals/new-kate-middleton-picture-proves-prince-harry-wrong/news-story/ae72219e5b925ff4f27afb8f543d16a6