Royal shrug meets news of royal move

While most Canadians are ambivalent about whether Harry and Meghan will settle in Canada, the majority do not want to pay for their cost of security

Souvenir mugs depicting Britain's Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, on display in a shop near Buckingham Palace in London. Most speculation about where they will live in Canada has centred on three places: Vancouver and Victoria,
Souvenir mugs depicting Britain's Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, on display in a shop near Buckingham Palace in London. Most speculation about where they will live in Canada has centred on three places: Vancouver and Victoria, both in British Columbia, and Toronto. PHOTO: REUTERS

OTTAWA • While many Canadians have been assiduously following every twist in the plans of Prince Harry and his wife, Meghan, Duchess of Sussex, to take a break from royal duties, the couple may find their plan to live part time in Canada will, in the end, be greeted by a great national yawn.

Half of Canadians contacted by the Angus Reid Institute, a nonprofit polling organisation, "really do not care" if the couple, known formally at least for now as the Duke and Duchess of Sussex, lay down roots in Canada, according to a recent survey by the group.

And an overwhelming 73 per cent of those polled said they do not want Canada spending any money on their security.

"The whole thing is being met with a royal shrug," said Ms Shachi Kurl, executive director of Angus Reid, which is based in Vancouver, British Columbia.

"There's a disconnect between the coverage of this story and the perceptions of what the reaction of people will be. It really signals to the royal family that Canada is not to be taken for granted."

Almost nothing is actually known about the couple's plans for Canada, but that has not limited speculation. The main question for Canadians who are eager to see them come to the country is where they will live.

Most speculation, particularly in the British press, has centred on three places: Vancouver and Victoria, both in British Columbia, and Toronto.

The Sun tabloid in Britain recently claimed that the couple was looking at a six-bedroom home in Vancouver listed for C$35.8 million (S$37 million). While technically in the Kitsilano neighbourhood - famous as the centre of the city's counterculture in the 1960s and 1970s - the house sits on rarefied Point Grey Road, which follows the shoreline and is dominated by mansions.

Further fuelling the Vancouver speculation have been the city's comparative proximity to Los Angeles, Meghan's birthplace, and her recent appearance at a charity in Vancouver's poorest neighbourhood.

Whatever national polls indicate, several Vancouver residents said they would welcome the couple as neighbours - although perhaps not for reasons people seeking a more private life would desire.

Ms Samantha Miller, 29, who works in human resources at the University of British Columbia, said the couple could boost tourism to Vancouver and lend the city some "sparkle".

"I feel quite bad for them for the way they have been treated," she said. "There is excitement that they would pick Vancouver."

The area around Victoria, the capital of British Columbia, is on the list largely because the couple are renting a house in one of its suburbs.

It seems like a good prospect because the winter weather in Victoria is moderate, it has long played up its British heritage and the local newspaper, which features a coat of arms granted to the colony of Vancouver Island by Queen Victoria, voluntarily withheld publishing any articles about Harry and Meghan's Christmas retreat there until they made the news public.

But greater Victoria has a population of 367,770 and is known mostly as a place where people retire rather than embark on a new life.

Toronto was the duchess' home when she was known as Meghan Markle and starring in the television drama Suits (2011 to last year), which was filmed in Canada's largest city.

The city is the capital of Canada's English-language media and once she became romantically linked with Harry, the couple's movements there were constantly tracked by cameras and reporters.

Toronto is also home to Jessica Mulroney, a close friend of Meghan's who recently babysat her child, Archie, when she returned briefly to Britain.

Mulroney, a fashion stylist who frequently appears on Canadian television, is married to Ben Mulroney, a Canadian television host and the son of Mr Brian Mulroney, a former prime minister.

Resolving the issue of who should cover the security costs of Harry and Meghan might be harder to work out.

Their soon-to-vanish status as active members of the royal family entitles them to protection by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) under a United Nations treaty.

The RCMP have remained silent on what will come next or what it will cost, and Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said recently that there have been no discussions on the matter.

But whatever the cost and wherever they live, Mr Matthew Tam, 45, who runs the Oh Sweet Days bake shop in Vancouver, is opposed to any taxpayer help because "they're not Canadian citizens".

"They're here for the long term," he said. "I would think they should pay for their own security."

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on January 22, 2020, with the headline Royal shrug meets news of royal move. Subscribe