Kate and William, who were seen with their three children during the platinum jubilee celebrations last weekend, are said to be moving into a house on the Queen’s Windsor estate this summer. The royal couple will keep Kensington Palace as their family’s London home and will continue to visit their Norfolk home, Anmer Hall, according to the Sunday Times. Royal commentators Rachel Bowie and Roberta Fiorito discussed how the move will create tension with Prince Harry and Meghan Markle on their Royally Obsessed podcast.
Mrs Bowie said: “It’s right next to Frogmore Cottage.
“Harry and Meghan are right there, there will be some tension.”
Ms Fiorito added: “In addition, this move is expected to significantly change the dynamic in Windsor, where the Duke of York has more contact with the Queen.
“I think that’s fascinating. Of course, the school ties the kids together.”
READ MORE: Kate and William send a “direct message” to Meghan and Harry
Kate and William are looking at the four-bed Adelaide Cottage, just a 10-minute walk from Frogmore Cottage, where Harry and Meghan lived.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have renewed their rent in Windsor, The Sun reported.
They stayed there when they returned to the UK for the Platinum Jubilee celebrations.
A privileged person told the Sun, “It’s a sign that they will not go away. They could easily give up Frogmore because their life is now in California.
He arrives when the Duke of Sussex appeared to issue a veiled warning to those closest to the queen, saying he wanted to make sure his grandmother was “protected” and had “the right people around her.”
Interviewed by an American network, Harry did not explain whether he was referring to royal assistants or members of his own family, but spoke positively of seeing the queen with “some element of privacy” after two years outside the UK.
When asked if he was missing the Prince of Wales or the Duke of Cambridge, Harry, who is in the Netherlands organizing his Invictus Games, dodged the question and said he was focused on competitors and their families.
His comments are likely to deepen the rift between the duke and the institution of the monarchy and his family, which until a few years ago seemed to have his support.