In early November 2025, Archewell quietly informed the U.S. State Department and the America250 Commission that the Duke and Duchess of Sussex wished to “represent His Majesty’s Government” at the official celebrations marking the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence (July 4, 2026). A 12-page letter, leaked to The Telegraph on November 28, requested diplomatic-level security (including Marine guards and armored SUVs), seats on the main platform next to President Trump and Vice President Vance, and a private Air Force transport “to reflect the historic UK–US alliance.” The couple even suggested they could deliver a joint address titled “A Modern Special Relationship.”

The reaction was immediate and brutal.
Within six hours the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office issued an icy statement: “There are no plans for the Duke and Duchess of Sussex to represent His Majesty’s Government at any America250 events. They are private citizens.”
Buckingham Palace followed with an even shorter clarification: “The King has made no such appointment.”
By evening, America250 organizers confirmed that Harry and Meghan were not on any official guest list and would be seated, if they attended at all, in the general VIP section “subject to ticket availability like any other private guests.”
The humiliation peaked when President-elect Trump, asked about the request during a Mar-a-Lago press gaggle, laughed and said: “Harry and his wife want Marine One now? Tell them to buy a ticket like everybody else. We’re not working royals anymore — they quit, remember?”
British tabloids went into overdrive. The Sun’s front page screamed “YANKED!” above a photoshopped image of Meghan being dragged off the Liberty Bell stage. The Daily Mail published the full Archewell letter under the headline “Deluded: Sussexes Demand Diplomatic Jets and Secret Service for 4th of July.”

On X, #SussexSemiquincentennial became the top global trend for 14 straight hours, with memes of Meghan photoshopped into Revolutionary War costumes and captions like “Give me liberty… and a motorcade.”
By the next morning, November 29, the couple’s spokesperson released a terse statement claiming the letter had been “mischaracterised” and that they “never intended to speak on behalf of the Crown.” Yet sources inside Archewell admitted staff had spent weeks drafting talking points about “shared Anglo-American values” and even commissioned a bespoke Union-Jack-and-Stars-and-Stripes gown for Meghan.
The final nail came from the U.S. Secret Service: a spokesman confirmed no protective detail would be provided because “the Sussexes do not qualify under current statutes for US-funded protection at domestic events.”

As of November 30, 2025, all mentions of America250 have been scrubbed from the Archewell website, and royal watchers say the King is “livid” at the embarrassment caused to the Crown so close to the actual 250th anniversary year.
In less than 48 hours, what began as an audacious bid to reclaim royal relevance on the world stage ended in one of the most spectacular self-owns in modern royal history.