Operation Harry in a hurry: Duke of Sussex may be whisked to Britain for a ... trends now

Operation Harry in a hurry: Duke of Sussex may be whisked to Britain for a ... trends now
Operation Harry in a hurry: Duke of Sussex may be whisked to Britain for a ... trends now

Operation Harry in a hurry: Duke of Sussex may be whisked to Britain for a ... trends now

Operation Harry in a hurry: Duke of Sussex may be whisked into Britain for a 48-hour Coronation visit - but without Meghan Markle

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Prince Harry could be whisked in and out of Britain for a 48-hour appearance at King Charles’s Coronation without his wife Meghan, sources said last night.

One working theory, dubbed ‘Harry in a hurry’, is that Meghan will remain behind in California to celebrate Archie’s fourth birthday while Harry flies into make a brief appearance at the event on May 6.

It was reported yesterday that both Harry and Meghan would be invited to the ceremony – but it remains unclear whether they will accept in the wake of Harry’s tell-all memoir about Royal infighting.

The report came after the revelation in last week’s Mail on Sunday that the Archbishop of Canterbury had been drawn into discussions about the couple’s invitation to the 90-minute service. 

It was suggested that they might accept the invitation if they were given a prominent pew and an undertaking that Harry would not lose his Royal titles.

One working theory, dubbed ‘Harry in a hurry’, is that Meghan will remain behind in California to celebrate Archie’s fourth birthday while Harry flies in to make a brief appearance

One working theory, dubbed ‘Harry in a hurry’, is that Meghan will remain behind in California to celebrate Archie’s fourth birthday while Harry flies in to make a brief appearance

The monarch has cut the guest list for the Coronation to just over 2,000 people, down from the 8,000 who watched Queen Elizabeth being crowned in 1953

The monarch has cut the guest list for the Coronation to just over 2,000 people, down from the 8,000 who watched Queen Elizabeth being crowned in 1953

Sources close to the organisers say Charles’s desire to deliver a cut-down and ‘diverse’ Coronation has proved a nightmare for organisers racing against time to complete the arrangements.

The monarch has cut the guest list for the Coronation to just over 2,000 people, down from the 8,000 who watched Queen Elizabeth being crowned in 1953.

Faiths asked to join in

The Government has written to councils and faith groups urging them to throw open the doors of libraries, museums and leisure centres and apply for funding of up to £10,000 to

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