Prince Harry warned against PR spin as Duke of Sussex scrambles to ‘win back public trust’
The father-of-two was at the Royal Lancaster Hotel in London on Monday
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Prince Harry has been warned against a PR spin as the Duke of Sussex is currently scrambling to "win back public trust", according to a royal commentator.
The Duke of Sussex was at the Royal Lancaster Hotel in London on Monday to pay tribute to children and teenagers recognised at the WellChild Awards.
The duke has since headed on a week-long visit to Lesotho for his charity Sentebale.
Harry's outings have been particularly welcome given the duke's outbursts towards the Royal Family in recent years, such as in his tell-all Netflix documentary and autobiography Spare.
Royal author Phil Dampier has said that Harry "showed his best side" in London, but it was "too early to say he has turned over a new leaf".
He explained: "If Harry does more WellChild-style events and less whinging, I'm all in favour of it.
"He showed his best side the other day in London and now he's carrying on good work in Lesotho and South Africa with his Sentebale project.
"But I think it's too early to say he has turned over a new leaf.
Prince Harry attends a welcome event at Sentebale’s Mamohato Children’s Centre
Getty"He has new PR people and I'm sure they've told him he has to stop moaning and slagging off the Royal Family as people are sick of that, not just in the UK but also in the US and all over the world.
"Now it seems he is striking out on his own and doing things without her (Meghan Markle) and maybe that's the way forward.
"She can concentrate on her American Riviera Orchard products and make money for the family, and he should go back to helping good causes.
"So If the old Harry comes back that's a good thing."
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Dampier has warned the duke against performing charitable duties if they are just merely PR spins.
This is because Prince Harry must earn back the trust of the British public, according to the commentator.
He continued to tell The Daily Mail: "But it's going to take a lot more than just a couple of weeks of headline-catching jobs to win back the trust of his family and the affection of the public."