The shockwaves from the Palace’s handling of Prince Andrew have not stopped at the walls of Windsor.
What once seemed unthinkable — the effective dismantling of royal titles and roles — has now become a precedent.
And that precedent, many observers argue, changes everything for Prince Harry and Meghan Markle.
For decades, royal titles carried an aura of permanence. They were woven into the fabric of monarchy, untouchable and insulated from public pressure. Andrew’s fall from grace has shattered that illusion. Though he was not formally stripped of his dukedom, the removal of military affiliations, patronages, and public roles demonstrated that titles can be hollowed out piece by piece until little remains but a name. In constitutional terms, the mechanism was subtle. In symbolic terms, it was seismic.
Royal commentators have been quick to note that this incremental approach may signal a broader shift. One veteran royal editor recently remarked that the Palace has learned the power of “quiet subtraction” — removing visibility, influence, and institutional support without the drama of a formal decree. The effect is gradual but unmistakable. A title may survive on paper, but its authority can be methodically reduced.:max_bytes(150000):strip_icc():focal(787x376:789x378)/prince-harry-meghan-king-hussein-cancer-center-amman-022626-2-65d26a3dba9e4c2ab7a5c6708781758f.jpg)
It is within this new reality that the Sussexes now find themselves. Since stepping back from royal duties in 2020, Harry and Meghan have insisted on retaining their Duke and Duchess titles while building independent commercial ventures. Critics argue that this dual strategy — distancing themselves from royal obligations while leveraging royal status — has strained the institution’s tolerance. Supporters counter that they are entitled to define their own path. Yet even some neutral observers admit that the optics have grown increasingly complicated.
A former palace aide, speaking anonymously, suggested that the Andrew precedent has “lowered the psychological barrier” to further action. “Once you demonstrate that status is conditional, not sacred, the entire framework shifts,” the aide noted. “Future monarchs will feel less constrained by tradition if they believe institutional survival requires decisive reform.” That comment has fueled speculation about what might happen when Prince William eventually ascends the throne.
William has long been portrayed as a modernizer, committed to a streamlined monarchy focused on core working royals. Allies describe him as pragmatic rather than sentimental. If that assessment proves accurate, the argument follows that he may be more willing than his predecessors to formalize changes that are currently unfolding informally. Some constitutional scholars point out that removing or altering titles would ultimately require parliamentary involvement, yet they also stress that public opinion plays a powerful role in shaping political appetite for such measures.
What makes the present moment feel particularly charged is the perception that the process has already begun. The Sussex brand has faced increasing scrutiny. Invitations to major state occasions have been limited. Institutional backing appears minimal. Media analysts observe that the couple’s ventures no longer command the same universal fascination they once did. “Indifference can be more dangerous than outrage,” one commentator noted dryly. “Outrage keeps you relevant. Indifference erodes you quietly.”
There is also a growing chorus among royal watchers who argue that the monarchy’s handling of Andrew was not merely reactive but strategic. By demonstrating that no individual stands above the institution, the Palace reinforced a message of accountability. If titles are no longer untouchable, then they are also no longer guaranteed shields against consequence. That logic, some believe, will inevitably extend to anyone perceived as placing personal ambition above collective stability.
Critics of Harry and Meghan maintain that repeated public criticisms of the royal family, coupled with the continued use of their titles in commercial contexts, have tested institutional patience. Defenders argue that they were compelled to speak out and that reform should include room for dissent. The divide reflects a broader cultural debate about tradition, autonomy, and loyalty.
Yet beneath the noise lies a quieter calculation. Monarchies survive not by clinging rigidly to precedent but by adapting just enough to preserve legitimacy. Andrew’s diminished standing revealed how adaptation can occur without headline-grabbing legislation. It can unfold administratively, symbolically, incrementally. For the Sussexes, that possibility may be the most unsettling development of all.
Because if change comes not in a single dramatic stroke but through steady attrition — fewer platforms, fewer formal acknowledgments, fewer institutional ties — the end result could feel inevitable long before it is officially declared. By the time the realization sets in, the ground may already have shifted irreversibly.
Whether that outcome materializes remains uncertain. Constitutional complexities, political considerations, and family dynamics all stand in the balance. But one lesson from the Andrew saga is already clear: in today’s monarchy, titles are no longer invulnerable relics. They are contingent on alignment with the institution’s future. And in a climate where reform is no longer taboo, even centuries-old conventions can be rewritten — step by deliberate step.