Prince William cannot bite at Harry’s claims – a public slanging match is beneath him

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FILE - In this Tuesday, Sept. 5, 2017 file photo, Britain's Prince William, the Duke of Cambridge, left, and Prince Harry arrive to visit the Support4Grenfell Community Hub in London. Britain's Queen Elizabeth II is set to hold face-to-face talks Monday, Jan. 13, 2020 with Prince Harry for the first time since he and his wife, Meghan, unveiled their controversial plan to walk away from royal roles — at a dramatic family summit meant to chart a future course for the couple. The meeting at the monarch's private Sandringham estate in eastern England will also include Harry's father Prince Charles and his brother Prince William. (Toby Melville/ Pool via AP, File)

Brothers apart

IT’S a tragic tale of two princes.

Both suffered enormous personal grief after the death of their beloved mother.

Will knows a public slanging match is beneath him — and the last thing the Royal Family need

Both endured the intense spotlight that came with a public life of privilege.

Both grew up in a family environment lacking emotional support.

Yet while Prince William has worked hard at his responsibilities as future King, his brother Harry has seemingly fallen into a deep and dark well of self-obsession.

The revelations in his memoir Spare and across two TV interviews last night are like the desperate spewings of a low-rent celebrity.

Sex, drugs, family fights; nothing has been spared in this horrifying Hollywood over-share.

Meanwhile, the newly installed Prince of Wales remains silent.

How he must be champing at the bit to have his say and refute the apparent nonsense claims of his brother.

But, however tempted, William cannot bite.

He knows a public slanging match is beneath him — and the last thing the Royal Family needs.

Though nothing, it seems, is beneath his brother.

Healthy debate

RISHI Sunak refused to admit yesterday that the NHS is in crisis.

It’s plain to anyone unlucky enough to rely on health and social care services that it is in yet another severe mess.

The Prime Minister’s attempts to bang senior NHS heads together ended with a pledge to buy up private care home places to clear hospital bed-blockers.

That means spending yet another £500 million on what can only be a temporary sticking plaster.

Rishi wouldn’t be drawn on whether he has private healthcare for his own family, under repeated questioning from the BBC.

Predictably, the Left began to howl in mock horror.

But would they really rather have a wealthy man join a doctor’s surgery queue ahead of a less-well off pensioner, rather than pay for care if he can afford it himself?

Sooner or later the country is going to need to have a grown up conversation about the future of the NHS, rather than ideological trench wars.

It’s the only way out of perpetual crisis.

Unclear Keir

WILL the real Sir Keir Starmer stand up?

First, the man who proudly voted for Remain and vehemently campaigned for a second Referendum says he’s a born again Brexiteer.

Yesterday the Labour leader who once said he would ban outsourcing in the NHS now says he’s in favour of private solutions to social care.

Starmer boasts he is an Arsenal fan.

But he changes his political clothing so often don’t be surprised if he pops up one day wearing a Spurs shirt.