and Prince Harry have shaken up their team once more, as four members of their staff have parted ways with the Sussexes' household. The Duke and Duchess of Sussex have waved goodbye to their LA-based deputy press secretary Kyle Boulia and their UK press officer Charlie Gipson, along with two members of the couple's private team, according to a source who spoke to
The changes have come not long after Harry, 40, and Meghan, 43, decided to appoint a new team under Meredith Kendall Maines, who at the start of the year. Harry and Meghan, who quit their senior royal roles five years ago, also recently hired Emily Robinson, who previously worked as a senior publicity director at streaming giant as their new director of communications. A source told the magazine: "Something tells me there will be another change in the future. Meghan and Harry have hired some of the most incredible people at the top of their fields, yet somehow none of them ever work out."
Another source that the big shake-up was because Harry and Meghan "never blame themselves".
A source claimed: "Meghan and Harry always blame everyone else and never themselves. No one ever seems to be good enough for them and yet they fail to understand why things don't change."
It is believed that Meghan's recent Instagram posts, including the controversial video of the duchess and Prince Harry twerking in a hospital room in 2021 ahead of Princess Lilibet's birth, are the result of the couple also bringing in a team from Method Communications, who are helping the couple with their press coverage.
In a statement, the couple's Chief Communications Officer Meredith Maines said: "As the Duke and Duchess's business and philanthropic interests grow, I have made the strategic decision to move toward a more traditional communications structure of specialist agency support, as previously reported in Forbes and PR Week several weeks ago.
"Transitioning from a team of two to an agency support staff of eight, operating across five different time zones, will give international media and stakeholders better access, and critically, faster response times to inquiries."