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Piers Morgan has been very public about his grievances with Meghan Markle since her tell-all Oprah interview back in March, and now the 56-year-old broadcaster is doubling down on his comments about the 40-year-old royal. After boldly stating that he doesn’t believe “a word Meghan Markle says” following the bombshell interview where Markle spoke of racism and a lack of attention to mental health within the royal family, Morgan recently said that he still feels no remorse over his comments.
Hopping on Twitter to air his thoughts on the topic, Morgan wrote, “I’ve now had 8 months to carefully reflect on my statement that I don’t believe a word Meghan Markle says….and I still don’t.” Accompanying this tweet was a collection of newspaper headlines reading “Little Miss Forgetful,“ and “Meghan admits she ‘misled’ court,“ throwing into question Markle’s honesty.
I’ve now had 8 months to carefully reflect on my statement that I don’t believe a word Meghan Markle says….
…. and I still don’t. pic.twitter.com/citwEgrxV2— Piers Morgan (@piersmorgan) November 11, 2021
After Morgan initially criticized Markle for her comments on the royal family within the interview, the 56-year-old eventually left his presenting job at Good Morning Britain in a flurry after major backlash. In an altercation with his co-presenter Alex Beresford, Morgan stormed off set before announcing he would be leaving the program for good after six years on the show.
Morgan’s most recent tweet comes after Markle made a public apology for initially claiming that neither she nor Prince Harry contributed to the unauthorized royal biography “Finding Freedom,” by Omid Scobie and Carolyn Durand, when a former aide recently stepped forward to say otherwise.
After the former aide, revealed that he was instructed to provide the authors with information on the royal couple, Markle wrote, "I accept that Mr Knauf did provide some information to the authors for the book and that he did so with my knowledge, for a meeting that he planned for with the authors in his capacity as communications secretary. The extent of the information he shared is unknown to me."
However, Markle still maintains that this was an oversight and she did not intentionally lie to the public about their involvement in the biography. "When I approved the passage... I did not have the benefit of seeing these emails and I apologize to the court for the fact that I had not remembered these exchanges at the time. I had absolutely no wish or intention to mislead the defendant or the court," she wrote.