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Daily Record
Daily Record
Entertainment
Chiara Fiorillo & Jacob Rawley

Harry has 'nothing to lose' ahead of trauma tell-all, royal experts claim

Buckingham Palace will reportedly pay close attention to a conference hosted by Prince Harry tonight, as they fear he has 'nothing to lose' after his Frogmore eviction, claims royal experts.

The Duke of Sussex will appear on a virtual conference alongside Dr Gabor Maté at 5pm to discuss "living with loss and the importance of personal healing".

The virtual conference, costing £17 per person, comes after Harry and Meghan Markle were asked to vacate Frogmore Cottage by King Charles, reports the Mirror.

Royal biographer Phil Dampier said Harry may feel like he has "nothing to lose" and there are fears that relations between him and his family may be getting worse.

Mr Dampier told MailOnline : "The King and Prince William would have hoped that Harry calmed down and stopped giving interviews after the publicity interviews he did for Spare but it seems not.

"In fact he may feel he has nothing to lose after bring booted out of Frogmore Cottage. So sadly, with just nine weeks to the coronation, relations between him and his family seem to be getting worse, not better."

The royal author added that the show will be "part publicity for his book and part therapy" for Harry.

The biographer added that Palace fears that he will lob in more "truth bombs" just as things were dying down.

Harry and Meghan are said to be "stunned" after the Frogmore eviction and confirmed they had been "asked to vacate" it.

(AFP/Getty Images)

King Charles started the eviction process from five-bedroom Frogmore Cottage on the Windsor estate on January 11, the day after Harry's memoir was published.

The late Queen gifted Frogmore Cottage to Harry and Meghan in 2018, where the Sussexes lived for six months before moving to California.

In January, just days after Spare was published, Prince Harry said he had enough material to write a second book. He told The Telegraph : "It could have been two books, put it that way. And the hard bit was taking things out."

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