Royal Family members who DON’T get police protection despite Meghan and Harry claims
All the WORKING Royals who don’t get full protection demanded by Harry and Meghan: Members of The Firm like Princess Anne, Prince Edward and Sophie Wessex don’t have 24/7 security despite hundreds of engagements a year
- Queen, Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Charles, Camilla, Prince William and Kate all get 24/7 police protection
- Princess Anne, Prince Edward and Sophie are guarded only when on official duties and engagements
- Queen’s granddaughters Zara Tindall, Princess Beatrice and Eugenie do not have state-funded security
- Prince Andrew lost his protection after stepping down and Princess Diana famously jettisoned hers in 1993
- Harry’s assumption that taxpayers would pay for their security after the Sussexes left UK has been criticised
Some Royal Family members receive no or partial security while others get 24/7 taxpayer-funded guards, it was revealed today after Prince Harry and Meghan Markle complained about losing their protection.
The Queen, Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Charles, Camilla, Prince William and Kate all get round-the-clock protection – while Princess Anne, Prince Edward and Sophie are guarded only on official duties and engagements.
Senior royals carried out 3,567 engagements in 2019 – including 295 by the Queen, 521 by Charles, 194 by Camilla, 220 by William and 126 by Kate. In the same year, Harry did 201 and Meghan carried out 83 – while Anne did 506.
Other royals including the Queen’s granddaughters Zara Tindall, Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie do not have state-funded security, while Prince Andrew lost his after stepping down from royal duties in November 2019.
Beatrice and Eugenie’s security is no longer paid for by the British taxpayer, despite them being princesses and grandchildren of the monarch, because they are not working royals and have full-time jobs instead.
Beatrice and Eugenie had police protection costing £500,000 until 2011 when this was removed amid a row over the cost, with the Queen having made it clear that she expected them to pursue their own careers after university.
Princess Diana also famously jettisoned her police protection team in 1993 after her divorce from Charles – despite the Metropolitan Police making efforts to get her to change her mind before she died in Paris in August 1997.
The budget on air travel for royal bodyguards hit £4.6million in 2018-19, while their hotel stays cost £2million in 2017-18. Anti-monarch group Republic estimates that taxpayers foot a £106million annual bill on royal security.
It comes after Harry’s assumption that taxpayers would pay for their security after the Sussexes left the UK was branded ‘arrogant’ and ‘unworkable’ by an expert after he spoke about the issue in the Oprah Winfrey interview.
The Duke of Sussex said in the chat, shown on ITV on Monday, that he had to cut deals with Spotify and Netflix after his family cut him off financially and stripped his security, forcing him to foot the multi-million bill himself.
This graphic shows how the Queen, Duke of Edinburgh, Prince Charles, Camilla, Prince William and Kate all get round-the-clock protection – while Princess Anne, Prince Edward and Sophie are guarded only when on official duties and engagements
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex spoke to Oprah Winfrey in a bombshell interview which was first aired on CBS on Sunday
But in reality the couple, who now live in Montecito, California, had moved to a country where their royal protection officers would have been legally unable to carry out their duties and therefore their lives could have been put at risk as British officers cannot carry guns under US laws or access intelligence about potential threats.
And if an officer harmed someone in the course of protecting the Sussexes, they could have found themselves facing an expensive lawsuit or even criminal charges as they had no legal basis to operate in a foreign country.
The level of protection given to royals is based on a threat assessment conducted by the Joint Terrorism Analysis Centre, reported The Times.
The JTAC gathers intelligence from security services in Britain, the US, Canada, Australia and New Zealand – known as the ‘Five Eyes partnership’ – and then makes recommendations to to the Royal and VIP Executive Committee (Ravec), which is chaired by former civil servant Sir Richard Mottram.
Scotland Yard provides automatic protection to only the most senior royals and members of the Government, but the force will also give protection for any individual who faces a big enough risk, according to the newspaper.
Simon Morgan, a former royal protection officer, told MailOnline today how decisions on what publically-funded security is given to individual royals are made by Ravec, which controls the security budget for the Royal Household.
He said: ‘Ravec as a body is chaired by a senior civil servant and they are effectively an accountability department to make sure protection is being run cost-effectively, to make sure that it is not being used and to make sure that it’s being run effectively.
‘They basically decree what RaSP (Royalty and Specialist Protection, the Metropolitan Police Service’s dedicated protection teams) as the delivery agent will give to various members of the royal family, the Government and anyone coming to the UK – if there’s a presidential visit, or if there’s a G20 summit.’
He said they will consult with parties including the Royal Household, the intelligence services, the Foreign Office and the Home Office and then subsequently decision ‘who’s going to get what’.
Mr Morgan, who worked for members of the Royal Family between 2007 and 2013 in the UK and overseas and who now runs Mayfair-based private security company Trojan Consultancy, added: ‘The Queen gets a full package as you would naturally expect, that’s actually on the statute books.
‘By law the Metropolitan Police Service will look after the throne and the heir to the throne, so that’s how you start to cascade back with who gets what.
‘The Queen has her package along with the Duke of Edinburgh, then you have the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall as the heir to throne, then you have the heir’s heir to the throne, as with the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge and their children.
‘The scenario is all done on a threat basis – what is the current threat, everyone looks at the threat matrix with regards to things like international terrorism and the fixated threat – these are essentially stalkers.’
Meghan is led away from a market in Fiji in October 2018 with her police protection officer amid a heavy security presence
Prince Harry is accompanied by a security team as he arrives at Edinburgh Waverley train station in February last year
He said a ‘fixated person’ will probably start off being a letter writer, then attend events or arrive at a home, before coming to some sort of ‘individual action’.
Mr Morgan added: ‘They’re a mixture of people – some of them believe they are members of the Royal Family and married to the Duke of Cambridge, and some have hatred for the Royal Family.’
He also pointed out that there is ‘no set formula with regards to who gets what’, adding: ‘It’s well documented that princess Beatrice and Eugenie had their protection taken away when they finished full-time education.
‘Again that was Ravec’s decision, because they weren’t going to be working royals upon leaving education, so that was taken away and they had a privately funded protection team.’
Asked if the system was fair, Mr Morgan said: ‘It is proportionate, it is accountable and it is necessary. And it has to be because someone is overseeing that in the form of Ravec to ensure it is all those things. You ultimately have to make sure it is cost effective and it’s not being abused.’
Speaking about Harry and Meghan, he continued: ‘They are no longer working members of the British Royal Family, they now live in America, which deals with a different set of legislation with regards to you operating as a UK police officer.
‘You also have to consider the welfare of those police officers – ultimately they are London-based. While you accept you will be away from home in the UK or overseas on a royal tour, you certainly don’t expect to be posted permanently away from home.’
He added: ‘The key thing about the protection is it’s just not the Queen’s gift to give or take away, it’s been very much quoted that protection (for Harry and Meghan) was withdrawn by the Royal Family or Household, but Ravec is an independent body that sits to make sure protection is accountable.’
And John O’Connell, chief executive of the TaxPayers’ Alliance, told MailOnline: ‘The Duke and Duchess of Sussex can’t have it both ways: either they’re working royals with the obligations which that entails, or they’re private citizens seeking independence.’
Meghan claimed in the bombshell interview that she was told her son Archie would not receive security because he would not be a prince.
Harry also told Oprah: ‘I never thought that I would have my security removed, because I was born into this position. I inherited the risk. So that was a shock to me. That was what completely changed the whole plan.’
But those familiar with royal protection have criticised both claims, with one police source telling The Times: ‘If you cease to be a royal, you lose your HRH and you go to another country like America, your threat level is going to reduce quite considerably because basically, who wants to kill you?
‘You’re not a royal. It still will exist – there still will be a threat against Meghan and Harry but it won’t be high. And the threat against their children is non-existent so the notion that her son should get protection just because they were born to Meghan and Harry is nonsense, really.’
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex introduce their son Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor at Windsor Castle in May 2019
Prince Harry and his wife Meghan hold Archie in Cape Town while visiting on a royal visit to South Africa in September 2019
Dai Davies, a former chief superintendent who led the Metropolitan Police’s royalty protection unit, said that Harry and Meghan’s plans for royal protection after they moved to North America were ‘utterly unrealistic’ and could have put British police officers at risk.
Donald Trump, the then US president, made it clear they would have no US-funded secret service bodyguards shortly after the couple moved to California from Canada last March.
He tweeted: ‘Now they have left Canada for the U.S. however, the US will not pay for their security protection. They must pay!’
Russell Stuart, a former California State Guard officer turned celebrity bodyguard, pointed out that Harry and Meghan had increased their threat level by moving from Vancouver: ‘This is America. We’re a nation of gun owners, we’ve got a lot of weapons. We’re ten times the population of Canada. California is a much bigger place, it’s more dangerous, you have a lot more potential threats than back in Vancouver.’
Initially when they went to Canada, the couple’s royal protection officers were given assistance by Canadian mounties, but this was only ever intended as an interim measure until other arrangements could be made.
Harry said they were told on ‘short notice’ that their Met police security detail would be cut off. ‘Their justification was a change in status,’ the Duke said, which he ‘pushed back’ at.
But effectively when their senior royal status officially ended at the end of March last year, they were on their own.
The Canadian Government confirmed it would stop providing security assistance to the family ‘in keeping with their change in status’.
This week Mr Davies, said he was ‘gobsmacked’ the couple expected British taxpayers to pick up the bill. Aside from the legal and practical difficulties of protecting a royal living abroad, the financial burden would have been huge.
The cost of a close protection team and static security at events was estimated at more than £1million a year when officers’ salary, overtime payments, overseas allowance, pensions, flights and accommodation costs were added up.
An armed team made up of at least six people including a principal personal protection officer and back up close protection officers accompanied the family at all times.
They work in pairs and if the couple travelled separately or attended separate engagements it required at least four of them to do the job as they work on relay shift patterns.
Many of the Scotland Yard officers who protected them had families in the UK and it would have been unfair to expect them to travel back and forth.
Such a vast expense would have been untenable at a time when Scotland Yard had already nearly doubled its flight budget to cover the escalating cost of protecting of globe-trotting Royals on official visits and holidays in 2019.
When Harry and Meghan first announced they were breaking from the Royal Family, a statement appeared on their website saying they were classified as ‘internationally protected people which mandates this level of security.’
But hours later, the phrase ‘internationally protected people’ disappeared as it quickly transpired that would never be the case.
Following their move, a joint committee made up of the Home Secretary, the Metropolitan Police’s royalty protection command chief, and palace officials decided their 24-hour protection could not continue now they were no longer working royals living in the UK.
On Monday, Mr Davies said: ‘It shows you their naivety and sense of entitlement. ‘It was utterly unrealistic to think they could continue to have their royal protection team working in America, in fact it would have put their lives at risk.
‘There is a reciprocal agreement in place with the US for occasions like official state visits, but British officers couldn’t just carry on working there, unable to bear firearms and with no access to integrated intelligence from the security services. It was unworkable.
‘Other royals and their children do without protection. They aren’t working members of the Royal Family, why should they have it? It was simply arrogant to presume they and their baby would get protection..’
Meghan said she and Harry wanted Archie to be a prince so he would have security and be protected, and she suggested he was not given the title because of his race.
But Archie, who is seventh in line to the throne, is not entitled to be an HRH or a prince due to rules set out more than 100 years ago by King George V.
He will be entitled to be an HRH or a prince when the Prince of Wales accedes to the throne.
At the time of his birth, a royal source said Harry and Meghan had decided he should be a regular Master Archie Mountbatten-Windsor. But Meghan told Oprah this was not correct, adding: ‘It was not our decision to make.’
Simon Morgan, a former royal protection officer, said decisions on what publically-funded security is given to individual royals are made by the Royal and VIP Executive Committee, which controls the security budget for the Royal Household
Mr Morgan, pictured next to Prince Charles at the Prince’s Trust Awards 2011 in London’s Leicester Square, worked for the Royal Family between 2007 and 2013 and now runs Mayfair-based private security company Trojan Consultancy
Yet Harry had always previously stressed the importance of wanting to be seen as normal, and he was thought to have wanted to give his baby the opportunities of an ordinary life that he never had, without the burden of being a prince.
Former chief superintendent Dai Davies, who led the Metropolitan Police’s royalty protection unit, described the couple’s hopes of security in the US ‘unworkable’
He once said he was always more comfortable being Captain Wales in the Army than being Prince Harry.
As the first-born son of a duke, Archie was actually entitled to have become Earl of Dumbarton – one of Harry’s subsidiary titles – or have been Lord Archie Mountbatten-Windsor.
But a source said after Archie was born in May 2019: ‘They have chosen not to use a courtesy title.’
Being a prince or princess does not automatically mean royals have police protection. But as a full-time working royal, Harry and his family would have been entitled to 24-hour security by Metropolitan Police protection officers.
Final decisions are taken by the Home Office, in consultation with Buckingham Palace. In recent years, the royal family has shifted towards a slimmed-down monarchy, focusing on those at the top of the line of succession.
Archie, who will move down the succession list if the Cambridge children have their own families, was never expected to be playing a key role in royal duties when older.
When Harry and Meghan quit as senior working royals and moved to the US, it changed the situation.
The prospect of the couple and their son living permanently in the US and not carrying out royal duties, but also having Metropolitan Police protection officers, paid for by British taxpayers, at their side was untenable.
But the royal family could have agreed to foot their security bill privately, and used a private firm.