In truth, Trump was probably never going to deport Harry. It may not have been practical and would certainly have annoyed the one foreign ruler he seems to actually like; King Charles III. True, British celebrity chef Nigella Lawson was denied entry to the U.S. over admissions of drug use in 2013, but talking up the possibility of giving Harry the boot was always more about staking out a particularly fertile patch of ground in the culture wars than enforcing immigration law equally. That said, using an astonishingly personal attack on Meghan to distract from the reversal of Harry’s deportation is a classic Trump move. Plus, it comes at an inopportune time as Meghan needs to accumulate good favor ahead of the launch of her Netflix homemaking show. Harry’s immigration status has been under the microscope in recent days after the Heritage Foundation, the right-wing conservative think tank which authored Project 2025, relaunched its legal efforts to force the U.S. authorities to release details of his immigration application. The suit was first launched after Harry revealed he had used hard, soft, and psychedelic drugs in his memoir, Spare—in which Harry, among other stories, shared about the time he took got high on mushrooms at Friends star Courteney Cox’s house. He also revealed he had used cocaine at 17 “to feel different.” The pressure group claims that since such a declaration usually bars an individual from immigrating into the U.S., this means either Harry lied on the forms or was given a sweetheart deal by the Biden administration. They sued in court to find out which, but in September a federal judge ruled the paperwork would remain private. However, the Heritage Foundation has now sought to appeal that ruling and a judge said on Thursday he was in principle in favor of releasing the documents. Trump told Nigel Farage in a GB News interview last year: “We’ll have to see if they know something about the drugs, and if he lied they’ll have to take appropriate action.” Farage asked if “appropriate action” could mean “not staying in America,” to which Trump replied: “Oh I don’t know. You’ll have to tell me. You just have to tell me. You would have thought they would have known this a long time ago.” The Sussex-Trump feud dates to a 2016 Comedy Central panel show in which Meghan, then an actress and not linked to Harry, expressed her contempt for Trump, labeling him “misogynistic” and “divisive,” and joking that she might move to Canada if Trump was elected president. Trump later famously referred to her comment as “nasty” ahead of his state visit to the U.K. in June 2019, when he was president and Meghan was married to Harry. In 2022, Trump told fellow Meghan critic Piers Morgan: “Harry is whipped like no person I think I’ve ever seen.” He predicted the couple would divorce, saying, ‘It’ll end, and it’ll end bad… I want to know what’s going to happen when Harry decides he’s had enough of being bossed around… Or maybe when she decides that she likes some other guy better. I want to know what’s going to happen when it ends, OK?‘” Trump used an interview with the New York Post published Saturday to praise Harry’s estranged older brother, William, with whom he met in Paris in December. “I think William is a great young man,” he said. |