Meghan and Harry have insisted Megxit was “never about privacy”, their spokesperson is now claiming.
This is regardless of simply hours after the 2020 announcement, Harry telling a charity an occasion in London the pair needed “a quieter life”.
While Meghan instructed Oprah of their bombshell 2021 interview she believes “everyone has a basic right to privacy. Basic.”
She added: “We’re not talking about anything that anybody else wouldn’t expect”.
But in a screeching U-turn, the couple’s spokesperson Ashley Hansen lashed out on the tabloid press accusing them of constructing up the “narrative”.
In a seething assertion, she instructed the New York Times: “Their statement announcing their decision to step back mentions nothing of privacy and reiterates their desire to continue their roles and public duties.”
“Any suggestion otherwise speaks to a key point of this series.”
Questions over the pair’s need for extra privateness have soared with the discharge of their $150 million Netflix docuseries.
Addressing problems with privateness, Ms Hansen hammered: “They are choosing to share their story, on their terms.
“And yet the tabloid media has created an entirely untrue narrative that permeates press coverage and public opinion.
“The facts are right in front of them.”
It comes because it was revealed over 15 hours of house footage was recorded by the Sussexes as they plotted Megxit.
The clips – taken on their telephones – have appeared within the first three instalments of the brand new collection, launched on Thursday.
They embrace Meghan contemporary out the bathe along with her hair in a towel processing what life might be like as soon as they depart.
Harry can be heard sharing his anxiousness over their new life in Vancouver, Canada – however they ended up in Montecito, California.
And heaps of non-public pictures have been additionally thrown into the collection – together with of the pair in mattress collectively and snogging whereas on safari in Botswana.
A supply instructed MailOnline: “This was all being filmed while both the Duke of Edinburgh and the Queen – Harry’s grandparents – were suffering from serious ill-health and in the last few months of their lives.”
But present creator Liz Garbus stated the clips are “very personal and raw and powerful” and make the viewer realise the “incredible weight” of the pair’s resolution.
This story initially appeared on The Sun and is republished right here with permission.