Harry: My lack of privacy ‘from birth’ and ‘personal’ cost of legal fight

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  • April 1, 2026
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The Duke of Sussex described the ‘personal and reputational cost’ to him, his wife and his children of taking legal action against media firms (Aaron Chown/PA)

PA Wire

The Duke of Sussex has spoken of how he experienced lack of privacy “from birth” as he described the “personal and reputational cost for me, my wife, and our children” of taking legal action against “powerful institutions”.

Harry delivered a keynote speech in Washington DC on Tuesday – the day his father the King’s historic state visit to the US was announced.

The duke, who stepped aside from the working monarchy six years ago, was born a spare to the heir and third in line to the throne.

Speaking at the IAPP global summit on privacy, AI governance and cybersecurity law, Harry called privacy a “foundational issue” that underpins the “trust, safety and the stability of our societies”.

He added: “Now, my connection to privacy, and the lack of it, begins in a different place than most. From birth.

“You may know that I’ve spent the past seven years in litigation against three media organisations in the UK over their systemic and unlawful invasions of privacy, as well as the cover-up of it, dating back to the early 2000s.”

Harry and other household names including Baroness Doreen Lawrence and Sir Elton John are waiting to hear whether they have won their High Court cases against the Daily Mail’s publisher Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL) for unlawful information-gathering, which ANL strongly denies.

The trial, which ended at the High Court on Tuesday, includes allegations of voicemail interception, landline tapping and obtaining information by deception – also known as “blagging” – by private investigators, freelance journalists and ANL staff.

Harry was previously awarded £140,600 in damages by a judge from Mirror Group Newspapers in 2023 for unlawful information-gathering and settled a claim against News Group Newspapers in 2025, receiving substantial damages and a “full and unequivocal apology” for both “serious intrusion” into his private life and “unlawful activities” by The Sun.

In an ITV documentary in 2024, the duke described how his determination to fight the tabloids was a “central piece” in destroying his relationship with his family, with the “rift” in part due to his mission.

He revealed how he wished his family had joined together with him in his campaign.

The duke has had a troubled relationship with his father the King and an ongoing rift with his brother the Prince of Wales, which worsened post-Megxit, and after the duke’s Netflix documentary and his tell-all memoir Spare.

In Washington on Tuesday, Harry insisted, as he addressed the summit from the stage, that his legal fight was “absolutely” worth it despite the “personal and reputational cost” to him, the Duchess of Sussex and their children Prince Archie and Princess Lilibet.

He described the “worst examples of an industry that too often behaves as though it owns people’s privacy – and feels it gets to decide what constitutes the public interest”.

Harry continued: “Unfortunately, I have come to learn that this exploitation has become normalised.

“That breaches of privacy have morphed into commercial tactics across industries, notably the tech industry with innovations like social media platforms and advances in artificial intelligence.

“As you can perhaps tell, I have nothing to gain from taking on powerful institutions.

“In many ways, it comes at a personal and reputational cost for me, my wife, and our children.

“But is it worth it? Absolutely. Because this is about more than one individual – it is about the systems that shape and influence all of our lives.”

Harry insisted the “current model of technology” was “failing to support progress” and “setting it back” for communities around the globe.