Their similar backgrounds and pedigrees could help the advisers smooth out the ruffled feathers between their bosses. But the Sussexes have served notice that they are willing to go outside the normal channels. There were rumors Friday that Prince Harry would soon leave to join his wife in Canada.
Britain’s news media continued to subject the couple to scathing coverage, with the Daily Mail noting, “Meghan Flees to Canada” and the Sun pointing out, “They’ve Left Archie in Canada.” The Daily Telegraph listed all the concessions it said the queen had given the couple, concluding, “they still wanted more.”
As the spectacle has unfolded in days of breathless headlines, there are emerging cultural fault lines, which break in the same way as the fraught national debate over Brexit. Tabloids like the Daily Mail and the Sun, which championed leaving the European Union, have tended to be more critical of Prince Harry and defensive of the monarchy, as have pro-Brexit papers like the Telegraph.
Left-of-center papers like the Guardian, which opposed Brexit, have tended to be more sympathetic to Prince Harry and his American wife, even if they season their coverage with disdain for the entire royal enterprise.
Marina Hyde, a columnist at the Guardian, drew a parallel between Prince Harry and King Edward VIII, who abdicated the throne in 1936 rather than give up his dream of marrying a divorced American woman, Wallis Simpson. The couple, she wrote, probably had little choice but to make an end-run around the queen.
“The move does look like the action of two people who know that if you consult others on things, they only try to stop you,” Ms. Hyde said. Maybe, she added, Buckingham Palace “can Skype the Sussexes in Canada?”