In yet another twist in the ongoing saga between the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and the royal family, Meghan Markle has once again stirred controversy — and this time, it’s not about an interview or a memoir. It’s about a word. Or, more specifically, words — the kind deeply embedded in the royal protocol and tradition.
Recently, eagle-eyed royal watchers and former palace aides have pointed out that Meghan Markle has continued using royal honorifics in public communications and professional documents, long after Queen Elizabeth II had allegedly made it explicitly clear she should not. This revelation has unleashed a wave of frustration, anger, and heated debate across royalist communities, social media platforms, and even among palace insiders who view it as a blatant breach of respect.
The Forbidden Words
The term “Her Royal Highness” (HRH) — once casually used by Meghan before stepping down from senior royal duties — is at the center of this controversy. According to sources familiar with palace decisions at the time of Meghan and Prince Harry’s departure, the late Queen Elizabeth II had reportedly issued a specific request: while they could retain the titles of Duke and Duchess of Sussex, they were not to use HRH in any official or commercial capacity.
This rule applied equally to both Harry and Meghan, and it was one of the defining aspects of their transition to non-working royals. However, subtle reappearances of these titles — allegedly in personal letters, website footnotes, and even virtual event registrations — have reignited the question of whether Meghan ever truly intended to respect the boundaries laid out by the Queen.
Why Now?
The timing couldn’t be more delicate. The British royal family has been navigating a difficult chapter, with King Charles III balancing public engagements and private health battles, while Prince William and Princess Kate deal with their own challenges. Against this backdrop, the latest Markle headlines feel like salt in an already open wound.
Royal commentator Emma Langston described it as “deeply tone-deaf,” especially considering that Queen Elizabeth’s memory remains sacred among millions in the UK and Commonwealth nations. “When a monarch makes a request, particularly one delivered with quiet dignity and finality as the Queen often did, it’s not merely a suggestion. It becomes an expectation,” Langston noted.
Public Backlash: A Social Media Firestorm
It didn’t take long for the backlash to erupt. Within hours of the discovery, hashtags like #RespectTheQueen, #MeghanGate, and #HRHDrama were trending on platforms like X (formerly Twitter), with many calling it a calculated move by the Duchess to cling to royal prestige while living in a Californian mansion far removed from Buckingham Palace.
One user posted:
“She didn’t want the duty, the discipline, or the responsibility — but now she wants the glory? Pick a lane.”
Another said:
“The Queen may be gone, but the institution lives on. This is more than a name — it’s a symbol.”
The reactions are not limited to anonymous tweets. Several public figures and former palace staff have hinted that Meghan’s continued usage of royal honorifics is both intentional and provocative — potentially a way of maintaining relevance in a world that continues to draw lines between monarchy and celebrity.
Intentional or Oversight?
That’s the key question many are asking: was this an intentional choice by Meghan, or merely a clerical oversight? Sources close to the Duchess claim that Meghan never personally added the HRH usage and that any such instances were carried over by third parties managing communications or were historical remnants never corrected.
Yet critics are not satisfied with that explanation.
“The Sussexes run a highly controlled brand. Nothing goes out without layers of vetting. If it slipped through, it’s because someone allowed it to,” said one anonymous publicist familiar with celebrity PR.
If true, the implication is more troubling: that this was not just about language, but about legacy. That Meghan Markle, despite leaving the UK and rejecting the system she called stifling and racist, may still crave the prestige and elevation that the royal title affords on the world stage.
Echoes of the Past
This isn’t the first time Meghan has come under fire for perceived disrespect to Queen Elizabeth II’s wishes. The Oprah interview, which aired while the Queen was alive and dealing with her husband’s declining health, was widely criticized as poorly timed and unnecessarily inflammatory.
Then there was the naming of her daughter “Lilibet,” a name intimately tied to the Queen’s private identity, which some insiders viewed as a manipulation of personal affection into public branding.
Each incident adds weight to the growing perception that Meghan’s relationship with the monarchy is one defined by contradiction: resistance to its traditions but eager adoption of its trappings.
A Palace’s Silence
As of now, Buckingham Palace has declined to comment officially on the issue. But insiders whisper that the matter has not gone unnoticed behind palace walls. It may not warrant a formal statement, but it could contribute to the already frosty relations between the Sussexes and the rest of the royal family.
It also raises questions about potential further restrictions that King Charles might consider imposing, should this behavior continue. Stripping titles altogether? Cutting off remaining ties? Or continuing with the palace’s oft-favored strategy: dignified silence.
Meghan’s Future in the Public Eye
This controversy comes at a time when Meghan is reportedly preparing to re-enter the entertainment industry more fully, with rumors of upcoming Netflix productions, brand endorsements, and potentially even a memoir or podcast series focusing on her “post-royal” identity.
But the lingering presence of “HRH” undercuts that very narrative. If she wants to move forward as an independent voice, why continue to wear the remnants of a title she so publicly left behind?
Some supporters argue that Meghan has every right to use the honorifics — she was bestowed them legally and hasn’t been formally stripped. They point to inconsistencies in how the royal family handles titles for disgraced members versus self-exiled ones.
Yet others say the issue is not about legality, but integrity. What does it mean to truly leave something behind? And at what point does holding on cross the line from nostalgic to opportunistic?
A Legacy at Risk
For Meghan Markle, every step she takes is watched — and judged — through a lens that few people on Earth experience. That is both the burden and the privilege of having been a royal, even for a brief time.
By continuing to engage with royal titles, even indirectly, Meghan risks undermining the very foundation of her public rebranding: independence, modernity, and authenticity.
The choice of words matters — especially when they were the very words the late Queen asked her not to use.