What Prince Harry’s Settlement Means for Him and Britain’s Royal Family

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Europe|What Prince Harry’s Settlement Means for Him and Britain’s Royal Family

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/23/world/europe/prince-harry-murdoch-trial-royals.html

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Harry won an apology and damages from Rupert Murdoch’s U.K. tabloids. Could the lawsuit’s end also help heal the rift with his brother, William, and his father, King Charles III?

A close-up of a young man with a short beard, wearing a blue shirt and jacket.
Prince Harry, who agreed on Wednesday to settle a long-running lawsuit with Rupert Murdoch’s tabloids over a phone hacking scandal.Credit...Nathalia Angarita/Reuters

Mark Landler

Jan. 23, 2025Updated 3:45 p.m. ET

Prince Harry’s last-minute settlement of a long-running suit with Rupert Murdoch’s tabloids was on the front page of a handful of London papers on Thursday, though conspicuously, not on any owned by Mr. Murdoch.

The Sun, which admitted illegal activity by private investigators it hired more than a decade ago to dig up personal information on Harry, didn’t get to the story until Page 6. The Times of London, Mr. Murdoch’s broadsheet, covered it at the bottom of Page 12, next to a report about the failing eyesight of the actress Judi Dench.

The Daily Mail, whose publisher, Associated Newspapers, is also being sued by Harry for hacking his cellphone and invading his privacy, reported the news on an inside page, as did The Daily Mirror, whose publisher, Mirror Group Newspapers, lost a phone hacking lawsuit to Harry in 2023.

Such are the hard realities of going to war with Britain’s tabloids, as Harry essentially did in 2019, when he filed the first of multiple lawsuits against three powerful publishers: Associated Newspapers, Mirror Group and Mr. Murdoch’s News Group Newspapers. The Daily Mail case is expected to go to trial next year.

Image

British newspapers at a newsstand. Press coverage of Harry and his wife, Meghan, turned unremittingly negative after they announced plans to leave Britain in 2020. Credit...Kirsty Wigglesworth/Associated Press

Even papers that are not in litigation with Harry, like the right-wing Daily Telegraph, treated the deal dismissively. The Telegraph, in a front-page article, said “Harry climbs down after eight-figure payout,” adding, “His quest to bring down part of the Murdoch empire has ended in a fizzle rather than a bang.”


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