Prince Harry Feels Confident and Ready as He Arrives for Final Legal Battle with U.K. Tabloids
Prince Harry Feels Confident and Ready as He Arrives for Final Legal Battle with U.K. Tabloids
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“This is the culmination of what has been years of litigation,” a source tells PEOPLE, referring to Harry’s cases involving the publishers of The Sun, the Mirror newspapers and now Associated Newspapers. “He sees this as an injustice that needs to be righted."
“People often don’t have the means to stand up to the might of the British tabloid media," the source continues. "But he is a fortunate man in that he is a man of means and has the ability to do this, and he has the will and strength of character to take them on. He sees it in the sense that if he doesn’t do it, who will?”
Harry, 41. is expected to attend court on some of the coming days and is slated to be the first witness to take the stand on Thursday, Jan. 22.
While the Duke of Sussex will be in London as the trial begins, it is unlikely that he will see his father, Charles, who is spending time in Scotland following the holidays and has public engagements there this week.
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The father and son last saw each other in September 2025, when Harry had tea at the King's Clarence House home during a U.K. visit tied to his charitable work. It was their first in-person meeting in 18 months amid the ongoing rift that became public after Harry and his wife, Meghan Markle, stepped back from royal duties in 2020.
The Duke of Sussex's appearance in the U.K. comes amid reports that his official, state-funded security could be restored for future visits to the U.K. Harry and Meghan lost that protection and the deep level of security intelligence that comes with it when they departed their royal roles in 2020 and moved to California.
On Jan. 3, The Mail on Sunday reported that a new review determined that Harry met the criteria to have that security restored in the U.K., alleging that the ruling was "expected to be announced within weeks."
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The Duke of Sussex has long fought for his security to be reinstated, including a high-profile court battle he lost in February 2024 and an appeal dismissed in May 2025.
A ruling in his favor could make it possible for his children, Prince Archie, 6, and Princess Lilibet, 4, to visit England in the future, as Harry's lawyers have argued that he "does not feel safe" bringing his kids to his home country without taxpayer-funded security.
Insiders previously told PEOPLE there had been “positive” signals from the government and that there was cautious optimism his security could be upgraded.

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