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what did prince harry say about trump

Prince Harry has made a few barbed or critical comments about Donald Trump over the past several years, mostly framed as jokes or veiled political remarks rather than long, direct attacks.

Key comments in a nutshell

  • On a recent appearance on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert , Prince Harry joked to the audience, “Really? I heard you elected a king,” after Colbert pushed back on the idea that Americans are obsessed with royalty, a clear dig at Trump’s style in office.
  • The line drew audible boos from part of the audience and was widely reported as a “swipe” or “jab” at Trump, coming after his state visit and during his second term as president.
  • In earlier years, Harry’s and Meghan’s public calls to reject “hate speech, misinformation and online negativity” around a U.S. election were interpreted in U.S. media as indirect criticism of Trump, even though they did not use his name.

What exactly he said

  • During the Colbert bit, Harry played off a comedy setup about Americans loving Christmas movies and royalty, then delivered the punchline: “Really? I heard you elected a king,” a line that many commentators read as portraying Trump as an over-powerful, almost monarchical president.
  • He followed it with a historical nod to his ancestor George III, joking about Americans having made “such a big deal” about opposing monarchy, which sharpened the political irony of the Trump reference.
  • In the past, he also urged people to “reject hate speech, misinformation and online negativity” ahead of a U.S. election, commentary that U.S. outlets framed as aligning with criticism of Trump’s rhetoric and online ecosystem.

How Trump has responded

  • Trump has repeatedly been critical of Harry and Meghan, at one point saying he was “not a fan” of Meghan and wishing Harry “a lot of luck” because “he’s going to need it,” comments that set the tone for a long‑running public tension.
  • More recently, Trump has publicly discussed Harry’s immigration status and past drug use, suggesting he could have faced problems under a Trump administration, though in some reports he also indicated he would not deport Harry, adding a personal dig at Meghan in the same breath.
  • This back‑and‑forth has helped cement a small but steady “war of words” narrative in political and royal coverage, with Harry’s jokes and Trump’s counter‑remarks both getting amplified.

Why it became a big deal

  • Royal commentators have criticized Harry’s Colbert joke as “reckless,” arguing that openly mocking Trump crosses the traditional expectation that senior royals and close royals to the king stay out of partisan politics.
  • Some analysts say the gag risks worsening already‑strained relations between Harry and the rest of the royal family, especially given the effort Buckingham Palace invested in Trump’s state visit and broader U.S.–U.K. ties.
  • Others see it as Harry leaning fully into a celebrity‑activist role in the U.S., where political jokes about presidents are common late‑night fodder and where his comments play differently than in the U.K. royal context.

Current vibe of the “Harry vs Trump” story

  • The episode has become part of a broader, ongoing forum and social‑media discussion that mixes royal gossip with U.S. political drama, keeping “what did Prince Harry say about Trump” in the trending‑topic rotation whenever either man does something new.
  • Comment threads and opinion pieces typically split into camps: those who see Harry’s remarks as fair satire of an unusually dominant president, and those who view them as unwise, partisan shots that damage royal neutrality and Harry’s standing with more conservative audiences.
  • As both Trump (now back in the White House) and Harry remain highly visible public figures, any new quip or interview line from either side tends to revive this narrative quickly in news and forums.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.