In Royal ‘Firm,’ the Family Business Always Comes
First
For all the familial drama, Harry and Meghan’s story
is also about workplace conflict — what happens when a glamorous outsider joins
a hidebound family business, one now in crisis mode.
Mark
Landler
By Mark
Landler
March 9,
2021
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/03/09/world/europe/royal-family-firm-meghan-harry.html
When Prince
Harry’s wife, Meghan, referred to the British royal family as “the Firm” in
their dramatic interview with Oprah Winfrey on Sunday, she evoked an
institution that is as much a business as a fantasy. It is now a business in
crisis, after the couple leveled charges of racism and cruelty against members
of the family.
Buckingham
Palace responded on Tuesday that “the whole family is saddened to learn the
full extent of how challenging the last few years have been for Harry and
Meghan.” The allegations of racism, the palace statement said, were
“concerning,” and “while some recollections may vary, they are taken very
seriously and will be addressed by the family privately.”
Harry and
Meghan’s story, of course, is a traumatic personal drama — of fathers and sons,
brothers and wives, falling out over slights, real or imagined. But it is also
a workplace story — the struggles of a glamorous, independent outsider joining
an established, hidebound and sometimes baffling family firm.
The term is
often linked to Queen Elizabeth’s husband, Prince Philip, who popularized its
use. But it dates further back, to the queen’s father, King George VI, who was
once reported to have declared, “We’re not a family. We’re a firm.”
It is an
enterprise that reaches well beyond the royals themselves, encompassing an army
of private secretaries, communications advisers, ladies in waiting, heads of
households, chauffeurs, footmen, domestic servants, gardeners and all the other
people who run the palaces, and the lives, of the royals who live in them.
Buckingham
Palace alone has more than 400 employees, who operate everything from a vast
catering business for the dozens of banquets, garden parties and state dinners
hosted by the queen, to a corporate-style public-relations apparatus, its
members frequently drawn from the worlds of journalism or politics.
“It’s very
hard to differentiate between the family and the machine,” said Penny Junor, a
royal historian who wrote “The Firm: The Troubled Life of the House of
Windsor.” Family members, she noted, use private secretaries for tasks as personal
as inviting their parents or children over for dinner.
“This is
not a family that is good at communicating with each other,” Ms. Junor said.
“They are certainly not good at looking after one another.”
In
explaining their reasons for leaving, Harry and Meghan, also known as the Duke
and Duchess of Sussex, often cited this bureaucracy rather than their close
relatives. The palace’s communications staff members did not defend Meghan from
scurrilous press reports, they said. Advisers told her she should not go out to
lunch with her friends because she was overexposed, even though she had only
left Kensington Palace twice in four months.
Harry
described a kind of royal deep state that permeates all aspects of daily life
and imprisons even family members, like Prince Charles and Prince William, who
appear at ease within its confines.
“My father
and my brother, they are trapped,” he said to Ms. Winfrey. “They don’t get to
leave. And I have huge compassion for that.”
The power
of the palace bureaucracy broke into view days before the interview when The
Times of London reported that Meghan had bullied members of her staff, reducing
junior aides to tears and driving two personal assistants from their jobs. A
spokesman for Meghan dismissed the allegations as “character assassination.”
The Times
of London said that a former communications secretary to the couple, Jason
Knauf, put his concerns about the mistreatment in an email to the private
secretary for Prince William, Simon Case. Mr. Case referred the matter to the
palace’s human resources department, which did not act on it. Mr. Case is now
the cabinet secretary, a senior policy adviser to the prime minister and one of
the most powerful administrative posts in the British government.
The Times
report cast an unfamiliar light on Buckingham Palace as a place of employment
rather than a world-famous tourist destination. Like any other employer, the
palace posts job listings: It is currently looking for a digital learning
adviser, a position that starts at 30,000 pounds, or $41,660, a year.
“It’s
becoming part of something special,” the online listing said. “This is what it
feels like to work for the Royal Household.”
Among the
fringe benefits of working in the palace is free lunch. The most senior
advisers to the royals are especially coveted posts, often attracting people
from the ranks of the military or the foreign service, some of whom are
seconded to the palace and return to their career tracks.
As their
last private secretary, Harry and Meghan recruited Fiona Mcilwham, who had
served as the youngest British ambassador in history, to Albania. Another
former communications secretary, Sara Latham, was a White House aide and later
worked for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign.
But Harry
and Meghan had a vexed relationship with their staff, according to several
people with ties to the palace — one that was complicated by the fact that they
initially shared staff and quarters at Kensington Palace with William and his
wife, Kate.
Even after
the brothers separated their staffs, relations with aides were turbulent, often
over unflattering news coverage of Meghan. The couple gave their staff little
advance notice when they announced in January 2020 that they planned to pull
back from their duties and leave Britain, resulting in the staff’s dismissal.
Tensions
flared not only within the couple’s staff but also with the family’s other
royal households, at Buckingham Palace, where the queen’s staff is based, and
at Clarence House, the residence of Prince Charles.
Press
relations are at the heart of the conflict between the couple and the family.
Despite his own difficult personal history, Prince Charles has cultivated
better relations with Britain’s tabloid press than Harry and Meghan, who have
cut off the tabloids and filed privacy lawsuits against several of them.
Harry, who
blames the ravenous press coverage of his mother, Diana, for her death in a car
crash in Paris in 1997, described an “invisible contract” between the family
and the tabloids. “If you as a family member are willing to wine, dine and give
full access to these reporters,” he said, “then you will get better press.”
He said his
father and other family members were terrified that the tabloids would turn on
them. The monarchy’s survival, he said, hinged on maintaining a certain image
with the British people, one that is propagated by the mass-market tabloids.
Like the White House, the palace gives access to a rotation of royal reporters,
who document the queen’s meetings and ceremonies.
“There is a
level of control by fear that has existed for generations,” Harry said. “I
mean, generations.”
It is true,
historians said, that the relationship between the royal family and the
tabloids dates back to the 1920s. The transaction has often been mutually
beneficial: The royal family has gotten exposure for its activities, helping to
justify its publicly funded security and other expenses. The tabloids have
gotten a steady parade of princes and princesses, dukes and duchesses, to sell
papers.
With the
arrival of Rupert Murdoch in the 1970s, press coverage of the royals became
more intrusive and harder-edged. Harry’s lawsuit against Mr. Murdoch’s Sun
newspaper alleges that his cellphone was hacked, while Meghan recently won a
judgment against The Mail on Sunday for illegally publishing a private letter
that she had sent her estranged father, Thomas Markle.
The couple’s
interview claimed a prominent media casualty on Tuesday when Piers Morgan, the
co-host of “Good Morning Britain” on ITV news, abruptly resigned. Mr. Morgan, a
strident critic of the couple, said he “didn’t believe a word” of the
interview, even Meghan’s confession to having had suicidal thoughts — which
prompted more than 41,000 complaints to Britain’s communications regulator.
“The
monarchy can’t survive without the media, but how do you manage that media?”
said Edward Owens, a historian and the author of “The Family Firm. Monarchy,
Mass Media and the British Public, 1932-53.”
Harry and
Meghan, Mr. Owens said, are the latest in a long line of royals whose personal
anguish has been portrayed as the cost of doing their royal duty. That
sacrifice, he said, was an unavoidable part of what George VI meant by being
part of the Firm. And it served as a justification to the public for the perks
of the job.
“The Firm
suggests that these bonds of family are an afterthought,” Mr. Owens said. “It
is duty and the business of the royal family that comes first.”
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