January 12, 2026 – London (where the weather is as miserable as the public mood)*
In a move that has left even the most jaded royal observers clutching their lukewarm tea in disbelief, Prince Harry and Meghan, the Duke and Duchess of Netflix, have reportedly made it crystal clear: when they inevitably grace the United Kingdom with their long-awaited, highly choreographed “return,” the struggling British taxpayer – yes, YOU – will be picking up the tab for their personal security detail.
Because nothing says “we’ve moved on from the institution” quite like demanding the institution’s money to protect you from the consequences of spending the last four years telling the world how toxic the institution is.

Sources (who definitely exist and are very close to the situation, trust us) confirm that the Sussexes’ legal team has been quietly circulating position papers insisting that “security is a non-negotiable human right” – especially when one has chosen to make a very public, very profitable career out of accusing various family members of racism, emotional cruelty, unconscious bias, conscious bias, and the unforgivable crime of having different interior design tastes.
The couple’s astonishing logic appears to go something like this:
1. We were forced to flee the UK in 2020 because the family/ press/ weather/ corgis were mean to us
2. We then signed multi-million-dollar deals to explain in exhaustive, six-part documentary detail just how mean everyone was
3. We wrote a bestselling book (or two) about how mean everyone continued to be
4. We did another Netflix series, several Oprah-adjacent interviews, and the occasional podcast episode reminding everyone exactly how mean the whole experience was
5. We are now graciously considering popping back for a visit (calendar permitting, between Montecito juice cleanses and brand meetings)
6. Therefore, hardworking British nurses, teachers, bin collectors and shelf-stackers should be delighted to pay for armed police officers to follow us around while we smile for the cameras and pretend we never said any of those things
Truly, the definition of noblesse oblige has never been more generously interpreted.
Critics – or as the Sussex camp prefers to call them, “the hate brigade funded by the palace PR machine” – have pointed out a few tiny inconsistencies:
– The couple voluntarily relinquished their publicly-funded roles in 2020
– They specifically stated they wanted to be “financially independent”
– They have since earned an estimated £100m+ from deals that were largely predicated on telling the world how awful life inside the royal bubble was
– The late Queen Elizabeth II – the woman they repeatedly described as trapped, manipulated, and occasionally complicit in their suffering – is no longer here to politely nod while they lecture her on modernising the monarchy
Yet somehow, the bill for round-the-clock protection (including, one presumes, officers trained to deal with rogue paparazzi drones, over-enthusiastic well-wishers, and the occasional flying avocado) is still expected to land on the Treasury’s desk.
A spokesperson for the couple (who may or may not be named “As Ever Communications LLC”) issued the following statement:
“Security is not about privilege – it is about basic safety. The Duke and Duchess have faced unprecedented levels of threat since stepping back, threats that have only intensified because of their courage in speaking truth to power. It is disappointing that certain elements would politicise their fundamental right to feel safe while visiting the country of the Duke’s birth.”
Translation: We said some things. People got upset. People getting upset created danger. Danger requires police officers. Police officers cost money. Money should come from people who got upset. QED.
Buckingham Palace, in its traditional style, declined to comment beyond a curt “security arrangements for visiting members of the Royal Family are assessed on a case-by-case basis in consultation with the Home Office and relevant authorities.” Which royal-watchers have helpfully translated as: “We’re not paying for their midlife crisis victory lap, thanks.”
Meanwhile, across the country, ordinary Britons are already warming up their keyboards for the inevitable hashtag campaigns:
#NotMyTaxBill
#PayYourOwnBodyguards
#NetflixShouldCoverIt
#WeFundedTheInsultsNowWeFundTheAfterparty
At time of writing, a Change.org petition demanding the Sussexes fund their own security through a special edition of “As Ever” scented candles (“Eau de Entitlement – notes of Montecito cedarwood, lingering resentment, and a top note of taxpayer tears”) has already gathered 47,000 signatures.
One thing is abundantly clear: the only thing more predictable than the Sussexes’ dramatic returns is the creative ways they will continue to find for British taxpayers to subsidise their freedom from the monarchy they so publicly escaped.
As ever, indeed.
Don’t take them back !!! They will bleed you financially.