Prince Andrew has found himself in one of the most precarious positions of his life. Stripped of his titles, removed from Royal Lodge, and distanced from the core of the royal family following his ties to Jeffrey Epstein, he has been navigating a public and private fall that shows few signs of reversing. In that position, he has reportedly turned his attention toward Prince Harry, the one figure within the extended royal orbit who might understand what it means to feel cast out by the same institution.
The logic, from Andrew’s perspective, is not difficult to follow. Both men have been pushed to the margins of the family, one through scandal and the other through a very public departure. Andrew reportedly sees in that shared experience a foundation for connection, viewing Harry as someone who has lived a version of the same story, even if the circumstances are vastly different.
Meghan Markle and the brand she is protecting
Whatever sympathy or kinship Andrew might be hoping to cultivate, it is unlikely to find room to grow. Meghan Markle is said to be deeply opposed to any association with him, and those close to the situation suggest that her position on the matter carries significant weight in how Harry approaches it.
The concern is reputational. Meghan has spent years building an independent public identity and a commercial presence that depends heavily on perception. An association with Andrew, whose name remains inseparable from the Epstein scandal, is seen as a direct threat to that work. The calculus is simple and firm. Whatever Andrew and Harry might have in common, it is not enough to justify the risk.
Meghan Markle and the royal family’s latest crisis
Royal observers have noted that Meghan’s instinct in moments like this has consistently been to create distance rather than engage. The current turmoil surrounding Andrew and the broader fallout for the royal family is precisely the kind of situation she is believed to want Harry to stay well clear of. The advice, according to those familiar with her thinking, is to stay quiet, stay focused, and avoid being pulled into a crisis that belongs to someone else.
That position reflects a broader pattern. Since leaving their senior royal roles, Harry and Meghan have worked to define themselves on their own terms, through their foundation, their media projects, and their public advocacy. A renewed proximity to royal scandal, even indirectly, would undermine the narrative they have spent years constructing.
Harry’s sympathy for those left behind
Harry’s response to Andrew’s downfall is thought to be complicated by his relationships with other members of the family. Princess Beatrice and Princess Eugenie, his cousins, are caught in the fallout through no fault of their own. Their father’s unravelling has placed them in an uncomfortable and very public position, and Harry is said to feel genuine sorrow for what they are navigating.
That sympathy for his cousins does not appear to extend to a softening of the broader situation. The separation between Harry’s personal feelings and the public positioning that Meghan is said to be guiding is a distinction that those close to the couple seem to understand clearly.
Where things stand
Andrew’s arrest on suspicion of misconduct in public office, connected to allegations that he passed information to Epstein during his time as the United Kingdom’s trade envoy, marked a significant escalation in a story that had already cost him enormously. The hope that Harry might offer some form of solidarity appears to be running directly into the wall of Meghan’s priorities.
For now, the bond Andrew is reportedly reaching for seems unlikely to materialise into anything meaningful. Meghan’s influence over the direction of their shared public life remains strong, and her read on what this association could cost them appears to be the deciding factor.

