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US

Republican who voted to impeach Trump projected to win primary | Republicans

Dan Newhouse, one of the few Republican House members to vote in January in favor of the impeachment of Donald Trump, is poised to move forward to the general election in Washington state, according to a projection by the Associated Press.

Newhouse was one of 10 Republicans who voted in January to have Trump impeached, even ahead of explosive revelations about the former president’s support and endorsement of the January 6 riots just a year prior.

This victory comes on the heels of another fellow Republican supporter of the impeachment, Peter Meijer, losing his votes in Michigan.

Republican Loren Culp, who has been backed by Trump in the election, was a close second to Newhouse in Washington’s fourth congressional district, garnering the second highest number of Republican votes in four out of the eight counties. In some of the counties where Newhouse won, however, I have received almost double the number of votes as Culp.

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Culp was up against six other Republican candidates, and will face Doug White, the district’s only Democratic candidate, in November for the generation election.

Despite his victory, the journey has rarely been smooth for Newhouse. Following his vote for impeachment in January, six Republican leaders in his district demanded his resignation.

He defended his position, claiming he “made a decision to vote based on my oath to support and defend the constitution”.

On 2 August, he had a majority vote in three out of those six counties that had voted for his resignation.

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Entertainment

Sad sign Prince Harry’s new book is going to target the Queen

The pen, at least according to playwright Edward Bulwer-Lytton, is mightier than the sword but then I suppose eight-figure book deals didn’t exist in 1839 when he was busy jotting down that famous line.

Because he thinks, whether a badly chewed Bic or a Mont Blanc, might be powerful – but a humungous deal with the world’s largest publisher is even mightier still.

Currently, in some secretive computer drive protected by a password only marginally stronger than that protecting the nuclear codes, is the manuscript of Prince Harry’s memoir. Reportedly set to be released before the end of the year, the author himself has promised that he would be writing “not as the Prince I was born but as the man I have become”.

And that man have you become? Well, that man looks like he has quite the ax to grind, with new clues suggesting his book of him could be even more of a Buckingham Palace-rattling doozy than he previously thought.

The question that has started to take shape is this: Is Harry about to ‘betray’ the Queen once and for all?

Since bailing on palace life to swan around California in hulking four-wheel drives and to pay energetic lip service to the notion of service, Harry and his wife Meghan, Duchess of Sussex have obviously done their darnedest to become the loudest and most vociferous critics of the royal family since the English Civil War.

But still, even in the face of all that, some ties with the monarchy mothership, and especially with Her Majesty, have held. After all, the Sussexes were there, albeit in the literal and figurative second row, back in June for the Queen’s Platinum Jubilee and they paid the 96-year-old a quickie visit back in April when they were on their way to the Netherlands.

But that was then and this is now.

As the clock ticks down to the launch of Harry’s book, will – or even can – this fragile tie hold once his autobiography lands with a thud?

‘Nothing is sacrosanct’ in Harry’s memoir

For months now there have been reports speculating about what revelations and criticisms the Duke might have been busy scribbling in his ‘My First Tell-All’ notebook.

Tom Bower, in his newly released Revenge: Meghan, Harry And The War Between The Windsorsmakes the case that “nothing and no one” have been held “sacrosanct” by Harry in writing his book.

Uh oh… let’s hope the corgis and dorgis haven’t learned to read.

Rewind to February 6 this year, Her Majesty’s Accession Day, when the Queen made the unexpected announcement that it was her “sincere wish” that her daughter-in-law Camilla, Duchess of Cornwall would be crowned alongside her son Prince Charles.

Bower writes that in the wake of the Camilla news, “any doubts about Harry’s antagonism towards his country and family were dismissed by his stony silence” on the matter and that his “refusal to acknowledge the Queen’s decision foreshadowed the problems to come”.

According to Bower: “Occasionally, [Harry] seemed willing to betray every value he formerly held dear. No one realized how his hostility to him had grown during his conversations with John Moehringer, the ghostwriter of his memoirs of him.

“To earn the estimated advance of about $US20 million ($A28.8 million), Harry would be expected to give Moehringer emotional confessions and secret details. These would settle his scores with his family and friends with him. ”

“Among the targets besides William, Kate and Charles would be Camilla. Meghan had identified her as racist.”

In revengeBower writes that the Duke of Sussex was “[edging] towards betraying” some of the people he had been closest to.

“To secure vast sales and recoup the huge advance, the publishers had encouraged Harry to criticize his family in the most extreme terms possible,” Bower said. “Easily persuaded, Harry edged towards betraying his father, Camilla, the Cambridges and even the Queen. And then, the deed was done. To earn out the publisher’s advance, nothing and no one had been sacrosanct.”

It is that last sentence that is the most ominous.

If what Bower reports is correct, then it sounds like the Duke of Sussex’s book could go even further than the denunciations of the monarchy and his family that he and Meghan have wheeled out thus far. (You know, the sensational charges of palace racism, “total neglect” and a callous disregard for the wellbeing of The Firm’s most vulnerable members.)

Who is in Harry’s firing line?

Meanwhile, elsewhere, the Daily Mail‘s very well connected Richard Kay has reported that “there is considerable anxiety in Buckingham Palace circles that Harry, 37, will use the memoir to settle perceived scores with family members and senior courtiers.”

“It is the disintegration of the bond between him and William over the past three years which has so alarmed courtiers.”

One person who has routinely been named as a possible target of Harry’s literary ire is Camilla.

According to Kay, “Five years ago, long before he had thought about writing a book, Harry invited friends of his mother to share memories and private photographs of her.

“One at least had a lengthy discussion with him about Camilla.”

“It was pretty clear that he did not have a high opinion of her,” Diana’s friend later told Kay. “He wasn’t very complimentary about her and I very much doubt he forgot what we talked about that day.”

Blow to the heart of the monarchy

If you take Bower and Kay’s claims together, then it is looking increasingly like the seemingly perma-disgruntled Prince will be pulling no punches on the page when it comes to his family and the monarchy.

And what that means is that, even if he only writes in the most glowing and affectionate terms about his grandmother herself, his memoir could be an abject betrayal of Her Majesty.

Should Harry spend a chunk of his book taking aim at particular family members and various pinstriped staffers who run the royal dog-and-pony show, that would still constitute a strike against the woman who is the head of both the House of Windsor and the institution of the monarchy.

Anything that humiliates or undermines the monarchy indirectly humiliates or undermines the Top Lady (as Diana called her mother-in-law).

Or to quote Louis XIV, “l’etat, c’est Moi,” which translates to “the state is me”.

If Harry does go down this route, then it would be a watershed moment, the sort of line to which there is a very clear ‘before’ and a dramatically different ‘after’.

In this scenario, it is hard to see how he could ever go back in any sense.

In early 2021, Harry appeared on James Corden’s Late Late Show in a dignity-defying appearance (who could ever forget him asking a complete stranger if he could use their loo?) and revealed that the Queen had given the Sussex family a waffle maker for Christmas. This year, will any household appliances be winging their way from Windsor to California?

So, so much is on the line with this book and it might turn out that in 2022, a huge check might end up being the mightiest force of them all.

Daniela Elser is a royal expert and a writer with more than 15 years’ experience working with a number of Australia’s leading media titles.

Read related topics:Prince HarryQueen Elizabeth II

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Sports

Rugby: Ardie Savea’s call to arms for wounded All Blacks ahead of first Springboks test

Sam Cane and Ardie Savea look on during a New Zealand All Blacks training session. Photo/Getty Images

By Liam Napier in South Africa

Mbombela Stadium’s towering stands were empty as the All Blacks briefly strolled around the venue, with its giraffe-shaped roof supports and miniature in-goals, one day out from the first

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US

Butler Township, Ohio, killings: 4 dead at multiple scenes, police search for a man who is likely armed and dangerous

Stephen Marlow, a “person of interest,” is likely armed and dangerous, Butler Township Police Chief John Porter said at a media briefing.

In a statement Saturday, Porter said authorities are being assisted in the search by the Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office, the FBI and ATF.

Information indicates Marlow may have fled outside Ohio, the statement read.

The FBI said he has ties to Lexington, Kentucky, Indianapolis and Chicago and may be in one of those cities.

Porter said Marlow was 5’11” and about 160 pounds, with brown hair. Authorities believe Marlow, 39, was wearing shorts and a yellow T-shirt and fled in a white 2007 Ford Edge.

Authorities have asked anyone with information to contact the FBI. They said Marlow should not be approached.

Police responded to a report of shots fired just before noon Friday, Porter said, and the four victims died at the scenes.

“This is the first violent crime in this neighborhood in recent memory,” Porter said. “We are working to determine if there was any reason for this horrible tragedy or if mental illness played any role.”

Stephen Marlow was driving this white Ford Edge, police said.
Wendy Chapman, a neighbor of one victim, told CNN affiliate WKEF the neighborhood is a quiet place.

“I would have never, even in this neighborhood, I would never expect anything, never,” Chapman told the Dayton station.

Police do not believe there is an ongoing threat to the neighborhood but have deployed additional crews and the Dayton Police Bomb Squad out of an abundance of caution, Porter said.

Porter said people should call the police dispatch if they have information on Marlow’s whereabouts or see the Ford Edge.

Butler Township is a town of just under 8,000 residents about 9 miles north of Dayton.

CNN’s Zenebou Sylla and Samantha Beech also contributed to this story.

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Categories
Business

Save Ferries. Ferrari 250GT California offered for sale at auction

It is your choice. If you have the means I highly recommend picking one up


Perhaps the most iconic ‘celebrity’ Ferrari of all time is the Rosso Corsa 250 GT California Spyder owned by Cameron Fry’s father in the 1986 classic movie, Ferris Bueller’s Day Off.

That car, a replica acting as one of 58 SWB Spyders, is considered one of the most collectible Italian thoroughbreds ever produced, with an unrestored ‘barn find’ example crossing the auction block in 2015 for a staggering €16.23m (A$24m) .

If you remember your movie quotes, however, Cameron claims his father’s car is so rare that “less than 100 were made”, and while that is true of the short-wheelbase Spyder, a further 50 long-wheelbase examples, like this car, formed the initial run of open-top 250s from 1957 through to 1960.



Designed by Carrozzeria Scaglietti for the American market (hence the California name), the 250 GT Spyder offered open-top grand touring with a luxurious cabin, generous luggage space and even an optional hard top for all weather conditions.

Powered by a 177kW/265Nm 3.0-liter Columbo V12 with triple Webber carburettors, this 1958 Ferrari 250 GT California Spyder is the 14th of 50 cars produced.

Like the Ferris Bueller car, it is also finished in Rosso Corsa red with a tan interior. Chassis number 1077 GT comes with a complete and detailed history, original tool roll and plenty of (no doubt scary) receipts to account for its immaculate condition, some 64 years after rolling off the line at Maranello.



So iconic is the 250 GT Spider, that many less-rare but still expensive Ferrari 250GT/E coupes (about 1000 made) have given up their original bodies to be converted to the open-top specification.

The 1961 Ferrari 250 GT California from the Ferris Bueller movie was a step even further away, being a replica ‘Modena Spider’ constructed from a modified MG chassis for the film. The car was sold at auction in 2010 for A$138k, about 200-times less than the price of an original.

While the LWB variants of the 250 GT California are rarer, they command the about half the prices of their shorter counterparts, with this example expecting to fetch between $7- and $8.5m (A$10-12.5m) when it is auctioned at Monterey on 20 August 2022.



James Ward

James has been part of the digital publishing landscape in Australia since 2002 and has worked within the automotive industry since 2007. He joined CarAdvice in 2013, left in 2017 to work with BMW and then returned at the end of 2019 to spearhead the content direction of Drive.

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Sports

All Blacks lose to Springboks, Ian Foster, score, result, highlights

Under-fire New Zealand rugby coach Ian Foster said he believed his All Blacks team took “a step up” despite losing 26-10 to South Africa in the Rugby Championship opener in Mbombela on Saturday.

Foster, under pressure after the All Blacks lost a home series against Ireland last month, said there had been encouraging aspects in the latest performance.

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The New Zealand team performs the Haka as South African players look on at the Mbombela Stadium in Mbombela on August 6, 2022. Photo: AFPSource: AFP

The loss to the Springboks was the fifth in six matches after three defeats by Ireland and another by France.

Foster has lost nine of 25 matches in charge of the three-time world champions while predecessor Steve Hansen suffered 10 defeats in 107 Tests.

An All Blacks assistant coach during the eight-year reign of Hansen, Foster was a controversial appointment ahead of Canterbury Crusaders coach Scott Robertson.

“It was a step up from our last series,” said Foster.

“The lineout worked well, our maul defense was good and our overall defense was pretty solid but the timing in terms of attack was a bit off.”

Kurt-Lee Arendse of South Africa scores against the All Blacks at Mbombela Stadium on August 06, 2022 in Nelspruit, South Africa. Photo: Getty ImagesSource: Getty Images

He said a string of penalties conceded by the All Blacks in the first 20 minutes had hurt his team.

“I felt we were not getting the rub of the green in the first 20 minutes, so that put us behind a little.”

He said the third quarter of the match, after the All Blacks were fortunate to trail only 10-3 at half-time, it was critical.

“We had to get back into the game but all the Springboks did carry hard and clean hard and earn a couple of penalties. Good on them, that is their game. It is a pressure game.” Foster acknowledged that the intensity of the match played in front of a passionate sell-out home crowd of 42,367 had affected some of the new players in the touring squad.

“Some of our guys who are here for the first time — that is what you have to go through and experience.”

Ian Foster (C) is under huge pressure after the All Blacks lost three straight matches. Photo: AFPSource: AFP

Foster said that although there was not much time before a second-round match against the Springboks at Ellis Park in Johannesburg next Saturday, he was confident of an improved performance.

“As the game unfolded, a few opportunities opened up. There were some handling errors but we made a few good strides. But we have to provide it next week.”

SuperSport TV analyst and former Springbok captain and hooker John Smit said it had been a “commanding performance” by the home team.

“We won the kicking game and the error game. This is a Springbok team that knows what they do well and they stick to it.”

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US

How Alex Jones’ behavior impacts him in court

The total damages of nearly $50 million was significantly less than the $150 million in damages Neil Heslin and Scarlett Lewis were seeking.

Jones faces two more Sandy Hook trials to determine damages later this year: One for parents of a 6-year-old boy in an Austin court, and another for eight families in Connecticut.

Heslin and Lewis have testified that Jones’ constant push of false claims that the shooting was a hoax or staged made the last decade a “living hell” of death threats, online abuse and unrelenting trauma inflicted by Jones and his followers.

After years of false hoax claims, Jones admitted under oath that the shooting was “100% real” and even shook hands with the parents.

But the bombastic version of Jones was always lurking under the surface — or even on full display away from the courthouse.

During a break on the first day, he held an impromptu news conference just a few feet from the courtroom doors, declaring the proceedings a “kangaroo court” and “show trial” railroading his fight for free speech under the First Amendment. On the first day, he arrived at the courthouse with “Save the 1st” written on silver tape over his mouth by him.

When he came to the courthouse, it was always with a security detail of three or four guards. Jones, who wasn’t in court for the verdict, often skipped testimony to appear on his daily Infowars program, where the attacks on the judge and jury continued. During one show, Jones said the jury was pulled from a group of people who “don’t know what planet they live on.”

That clip was shown to the jury. So was a snapshot from his Infowars website showing Judge Maya Guerra Gamble engulfed in flames. She laughed at that.

Jones was only slightly less combative in court. He was the only witness to testify in his defense of him. Gamble warned Jones’ lawyers before it even started that if he tried to turn it into a performance, she would clear the courtroom and shut down the livestream broadcasting the trial to the world.

When Jones arrived for Lewis’ testimony, Gamble asked if he was chewing gum, a violation of a strict rule in her courtroom. She’d scolded his attorney Andino Reynal several times already.

That led to a testy exchange. Jones said he wasn’t chewing gum. Gamble said she could see his mouth moving. Jones opened wide and leaned over the defense table to show her a gap in her mouth where he’d had a tooth extracted. Jones insisted he was only massaging his hole with his tongue.

“Don’t show me,” the judge said.

Some legal experts said they were surprised by Jones’ behavior and questioned whether it was a calculated risk to increase his appeal to fans.

“It’s the most bizarre behavior I have ever seen at a trial,” said Barry Covert, a Buffalo, New York, First Amendment lawyer. “In my opinion, Jones is a money-making juggernaut — crazy like a fox,” Covert said. “The bigger the spectacle, the better.”

Kevin Goldberg, a First Amendment specialist at the Maryland-based Freedom Forum, said he found it hard to imagine what Jones might be thinking and what benefit he could derive from his behavior.

“I don’t know what it is designed to accomplish other than being on brand for Alex Jones,” said Goldberg. “This seems to be a man who has built his brand of him… on disrespecting the institutions of government… and this court.”

Defendants at trial are often given some leeway because they have so much at stake — prison in criminal cases and, in Jones’ civil trial, potential financial ruin. Monetary sanctions or even post-trial contemplate charges are also a possibility.

Gamble had to be careful how she handled it all, Covert said.

“Jones’ bizarre behavior is putting the judge in a very difficult box,” said Covert. “She doesn’t want to appear to put her finger on the scales of justice.”

Jones skipped Heslin’s testimony when he described for the jury holding his dead son in his arms with a “bullet hole through his head.”

Heslin said he wanted to confront Jones face-to-face and called his absence that day “cowardly.” Jones was instead appearing on his daily broadcast of him.

Jones was in the room when Lewis took the stand, sitting barely 10 feet (3 meters) away as she looked directly at him.

“My son existed. I am not ‘deep state,’ she said of the conspiracy theory of a shadowy network of federal workers running the government.

“I know you know that,” Lewis said.

When Lewis Jones asked if he thought she was an actor, Jones answered, “No,” but was cut off by Gamble, who scolded him for speaking out of turn.

At the end of that day, Jones and the parents shook hands. Lewis even handed Jones a sip of water to help calm a persistent cough Jones said was caused by a torn larynx. Her attorney Wesley Ball quickly stepped in to break it up.

“No,” Ball snapped at Jones, “You are NOT doing this.”

Jones was the only witness in his defense. His testimony from him pushed the rules of the court so often that the plaintiffs openly questioned whether Jones and his attorneys were trying to sabotage the proceedings and force a mistrial. They filed a motion for sanctions against them after Jones claimed he was bankrupt, which attorneys disputed and was off limits in testimony.

At one point, Jones appeared flabbergasted when the family’s attorneys announced that Jones’ legal team had mistakenly sent them two years’ worth of data from his cellphone — a massive data dump they said should have been produced in discovery but wasn’t. They said it proved he’d been receiving texts and emails about Sandy Hook and his media company’s finances that he hadn’t turned over under court orders.

“This is your Perry Mason moment,” Jones snapped.

Plaintiff’s attorney Mark Bankston said Thursday that the House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the US Capitol had requested those materials and that he intended to give it to them.

The Jan. 6 committee first subpoenaed Jones in November, demanding a deposition and documents related to his efforts to spread misinformation about the 2020 election and a rally on the day of the attack.

During the trial, Jones often spoke out of turn, and was cut off when he veered into conspiracies, ranging from the Sept. 11 terror attacks being staged to a fake effort of the United Nations on world depopulation. He continued to call into question some of the biggest events and significant government institutions in American life.

“This,” the judge told him, “is not your show.”

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Business

No mortgage? Here’s why you should still pay attention to interest rate rises

This week, in a further attempt to curb rising inflation, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) raised the country’s cash rate for the fourth month in a row.

With the cash rate now at 1.85 per cent, those who took out low-interest loans during the last two years are facing the potential of hundreds of extra dollars each mortgage payment.

But for those who don’t have a mortgage, the concern around rising interest rates might be confusing.

What is the cash rate and why is it going up?

Know how your iceberg lettuce is costing $10 a head right now? It’s just one of the signs of inflation is soaring at the moment.

In June, annual inflation hit 6.1 per cent, the highest level in 21 years. This is due to multiple factors including supply chain interruptions from COVID-19 and the war in Ukraine.

To curb this inflation (the RBA usually likes to have it around 2–3 per cent) the RBA has rapidly been increasing the cash rate since May this year.

This means the amount of interest banks and lenders must pay on the money that they borrow between each other increases.

Banks will usually pass on the rate rise, like we saw earlier this week, and the higher cost of borrowing dampens demand and economic activity.

When it becomes more expensive to borrow money, there’s less demand for goods and services in the economy and the rate of inflation will usually decline.

First home buyers could be pushed back into renting

According to PropTrack senior economist Paul Ryan, a rising cash rate does not automatically mean your rent is going to go up.

“There’s not a direct effect of cash rate onto rents but they’re definitely inter-related,” he said.

“There may be some kind of attentiveness effect here where landlords see rates rise, they assess their costs and that may prompt them to raise rents for renters. But that is not the only reason, the other reason they are able to raise rents because the demand for rentals is so great.”

A combination of factors including returning international students and tourists, as well as housing market changes brought by COVID has seen rents rise dramatically over the last 12 months.

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Categories
Technology

New Halo Infinite Update Adding More Community-Requested Features

halo-infinite developer 343 Industries shared with players some insights into what’s planned for the game’s next update scheduled to release on August 9th. It’s a “Drop Pod” update which means it contains smaller features and fixes rather than new game modes and such, but 343 still says it’s one that addresses several community-requested features ranging from improvements on the game’s armor system to making challenges more visible for players looking to check off those tasks.

In this next update, 343 is freeing up visors to work with different armor cores rather than the ones they’re currently restricted to. Players may recall that the developer said not long ago it planned to make different armor pieces compatible with multiple armor cores rather than having the cosmetics restricted to certain cores, but the process was said to be a gradual one. In this next update, “all visors that are currently in the game, and all future visors to come, will work across all helmets from all armor cores.”

“At present, there are a multitude of viewers in the game split across the 5 armor cores,” 343’s senior community manager John Junyszek said in the August Drop Pod preview. “If you’ve wanted to use the shiny gold Noble visor (which has hitherto been locked to the Mark V [B] armor core) to complete your look on any of your other cores, you’ll be able to make that happen when the August Drop Pod lands.”

While that armor change is the highlight of the update, 343 is also making it so that challenges will be viewable right from the start menu so that players can easily check in on their tasks at hand to see what needs to be completed. This same update will also lay the groundwork for more ranked playlists in the future with a new playlist or two already coming in this next update.

“Kicking things off will be Ranked Doubles, which is set to land two weeks after the Drop Pod’s release – along with a CSR reset. Additionally, a social Team Doubles playlist will be accompanying Ranked Doubles on its launch day, meaning Halo Infinite will be getting twice the 2v2 fun.”

Halo Infinite’s August Drop Pod update arrives on August 9th, so expect these features to be available then.

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Categories
Entertainment

Prince Harry’s legal battle over security has stepped up a gear

It’s well known that Prince Harry and Meghan Markle have been unhappy with the level of security offered to them during their visits to the UK, after they discussed it publicly during their tell-all interview with Oprah Winfrey (where they also got deep about their decision to step away from their senior roles and a whole host of other matters).

Since then, the Sussexes have repeatedly continued to say that a lack of appropriate security is a major reason why they’ve not returned to the UK, along with the pandemic, as much as they’d have liked. Their stance is that the risk of threat to them (and their children, Lili and Archie) is no lower now that they’re no longer working royals.

Now, alongside a lawsuit already in motion against the Home Office, which highlighted tensions between himself and the Queen’s top aid, the Duke of Sussex has filed a further one against the Home Office and also the Metropolitan Police in relation to security matters.

It is believed to also center on the decision not to allow the Sussexes to privately pay for the top-level security that was previously afforded to them via the Home Office and the Met, through taxpayer money (since dropping back from their public duties they’ re no longer entitled to the same teams etc as they’re now seen as private citizens, regardless of whether or not they fund it themselves).

meghan harrynews

Chris JacksonGetty Images

An official from the Judicial Office told MailOnline: “It is at an early stage, no hearings have been listed yet and no decisions have been made.”

Prince Harry won the most recent round of his court fight, meaning he is now entitled to take the case forward for a full judicial review.

To date, it’s estimated that the government have spent £100,000 on the legal battle so far – The Sun reports that this includes £55,254 on the government’s Legal Department, £34,824 on counsel and £16.55 on couriers. Should the prince’s bid fail, he will likely need to cover all legal costs involved in his case against the Home Office.

Here’s hoping that things get resolved soon and that the Sussexes once again feel safe enough to spend proper time with their family and friends over in the UK, something it seems the Queen is especially keen on happening as she recently offered them an olive branch invitation.

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