MC PAPA LINC

Omid Scobie insists Harry and Meghan didn’t brief him for Endgame – but admits there are ‘plenty of people around them’ who DID – as he embarks on media blitz amid backlash to his ‘poisonous’ book


Omid Scobie today insisted that Harry and Meghan did not brief him for Endgame – but admitted ‘people around them’ were happy to tell all about ‘the ins and outs’ of their rows with Royal Family.

Mr Scobie appears to be in New York today for a series of US TV interviews to promote his latest attack on the Royal Family, calling much of the criticism of it ‘nonsense’.

Speaking to the London Evening Standard, the Sussexes’ preferred royal reporter said that he had met Meghan on a number of occasions.

But he again denied being close to the former Suits star and her royal husband, repeatedly insisting that they helped him with the new book. 

He said: ‘There’s enough people around them and in their orbit who know the ins and outs of things’, adding: ‘If there’s ever been a private encounter with Meghan, I’ve spoken about it’.

Scobie’s ‘depressingly poisonous’ Endgame was today written off as just another book by those inside Buckingham Palace, MailOnline can reveal today, as the under-fire author hit back.

He hit back at critics on Instagram – and ignored some of the reviews – to declare: ‘After all the nonsense written by people who haven’t seen the book, I’m looking forward to everyone actually being able to read Endgame for themselves’.

Omid Scobie insists Harry and Meghan didn’t brief him for Endgame – but admits there are ‘plenty of people around them’ who DID – as he embarks on media blitz amid backlash to his ‘poisonous’ book

Omid Scobie appears to be in New York today (pictured) for a series of US TV interviews to promote his latest attack on the Royal Family – but Palace insiders have ignored it

King Charles III (L) and Britain’s Prime Minister Rishi Sunak (C) speak with CEO of Nissan Makoto Uchida (R) at Buckingham Palace to mark the conclusion of the Global Investment Summit yesterday

Prince William, Prince of Wales onstage during the 2023 Tusk Conservation Awards at The Savoy Hotel last night

Buckingham Palace has kept a contemptuous silence but a royal source has dismissed Scobie’s Endgame as just another book on the Windsors that is not worthy of official comment. 

The insider told MailOnline when asked if there were truth in claims made by Mr Scobie: ‘There are hundreds of books written about the Royal Family’. Endgame was released today but some of the reviews been poor. 

Even the Sussex-sympathising New York Times was withering, comparing his writing to an AI chatbot with one section compared to a press release from Meghan and Harry. 

The new book on the royals was branded ‘vicious’ and ‘plain nasty’ last night. Well-placed sources described wild claims that Charles, Camilla and William conspired to undermine Harry and Meghan as ‘depressingly poisonous’. 

Omid Scobie‘s book also takes aim at the Princess of Wales, branding her ‘cold’ and lambasting her for backing mental health causes while ‘ignoring Meghan’s cries for help’.

It tries to stoke a row over the Duke and Duchess of Edinburgh‘s jokey bid to deflect questions about the Sussexes’ bombshell Oprah Winfrey interview by saying: ‘Oprah who?’

He says this made Edward and Sophie seem ‘casually bigoted’. Endgame, which was published in Australia yesterday and hits shelves here today, paints an almost comically negative view of the monarchy, with royals depicted as pantomime-style villains.

Buckingham Palace and Kensington Palace have declined to comment, believing they have nothing to gain from engaging with the claims. Charles and William were both instead out on public engagements close to their hearts – the King hosting a global investment summit and his son attending the Tusk Conservation Awards.

Royal sources described wild claims that Charles, Camilla and William conspired to undermine Harry and Meghan as ‘depressingly poisonous’

Those in royal circles describe the book as ‘plain nasty’, ‘vicious’ and a ‘skewed’ retelling of family events ‘in the Sussex style’. Endgame claims:

  • Charles’s ‘ineptitude’ in handling Harry and Meghan – and refusal to give them the apology they demanded – has turned them into ‘disruptors’;
  • Harry tried to ‘reach out’ to his father after the publication of his vitriolic memoir, Spare, earlier this year by calling his father, but felt the King’s response was ‘cold and brief’;
  • Senior royals turned a blind eye to aides leaking details about the Sussexes as part of their power games and subjected them to ‘institutional cruelty’;
  • William and his father are at loggerheads about the future of the monarchy and the handling of family issues;
  • Their ‘distrust and simmering animosity’ resulted in Charles deriving ‘schadenfreude’ from his son’s supposedly disastrous tour of Caribbean last year;
  • William is ‘colder’ – but also inexplicably more ‘hot-headed’ – than his father and ‘has no problem taking prisoners on the way’;
  • Camilla colluded in stories being leaked about other royals and has ‘no relationship’ with Harry. The book says she has ‘great sympathy’ for what Meghan went through but ‘no respect’ for the way the Sussexes handled themselves;
  • The King was so indecisive about how to treat his beleaguered brother Andrew that William had to step in to insist he lose his privileges;
  • Charles ‘stumbled’ through his first 100 days as King and Queen Elizabeth had so little faith in him she made a former spymaster her ‘CEO’.

Despite Scobie’s claims to be independent from the Sussexes, they are the only ones spared his sharp words, rumours and tittle-tattle. He claims senior royals were jealous of Harry and Meghan’s success and undermined them.

Meghan suffered because she was too dynamic, he says, ‘insufficiently reverential’ as a woman of colour working in an ‘entitled, exceedingly white space’ and reminded the royals of Princess Diana.

As a result he says palace aides refused to defend her against the negative stories that had begun to emerge about her, while being happy to take action against a publication that suggested Kate had undergone ‘baby Botox’.

By contrast Queen Elizabeth liked the fact that ‘Katie Keen’ – a moniker said to have originated on social media – was ‘coachable’ as a future royal.

Yet Scobie claims her lack of patronages, engagements and insistence on spending time with her three young children in the school holidays makes her technically a ‘part-time working royal’.

Scobie says the statement following Harry and Meghan’s Oprah interview that ‘recollections may vary’ was deliberately drafted to ‘plants seeds of doubt in people’s minds’ about their claims.

William, Harry, Meghan and Charles speak together at Westminster Abbey in March 2019

Omid Scobie’s new book Endgame about the Royal Family is released today

Wiliam, meanwhile, displays ‘indifference’, ‘harshness’ and continues to ‘stonewall’ Harry when all his brother wants is ‘honest conversations and accountability’. William’s attempts to promote racial harmony are branded ‘opportunistic’ giving his refusal to talk to Harry about ‘unconscious bias’ in his own family.

The book says Charles and Meghan discussed the issue in an exchange of letters – in which she named two people she claims expressed concerned about her son Archie’s skin colour – but William has failed to respond to the King’s requests for him to talk about it with Harry too.

While aides had expected the book to be a ‘hatchet job’ based on Scobie’s previously flattering tome about the Sussexes, Finding Freedom, it has still upset many.

One source said that while much of it is a ‘rehash’ of well-known events from a ‘decidedly Sussex skew’, the almost pantomime nature of the protagonists calls much of what Scobie claims into question.

Another said there was a ‘fairytale’ air to the book. ‘It just shows how little he actually knows. It’s quite embarrassing really,’ they remarked.

The book does however contain some insights over the letters exchanged by Charles and Meghan and on the Sussexes’ daily family routine.



Source link

Exit mobile version