Piers Morgan has always made it clear that he is not a fan of Meghan Markle.
And the Good Morning Britain host, 55, has once again launched a scathing attack on the wife of Prince Harry after reading extracts of Finding Freedom – a new book written about the royal couple by authors Omid Scobie and Carolyn Durand.
As the former newspaper editor enjoys his holiday in sunny St. Tropez, he took time out to pen his column where he focused on the Duke and Duchess of Sussex.
In the lengthy article, the outspoken personality blasts them for having “delusions of grandeur” and fumes that the new biography echoes their “incessantly negative, miserably, angry whining” before dubbing Harry a “hostage” who Meghan “stole away.”
“As with so much that surrounds the Duchess’s conduct, the hypocrisy is stunning,” Piers writes for MailOnline. “But what’s even more repellent is her totally delusional victimhood.”
He continues: “‘I gave up my entire life for this family,’ whines Meghan in the book.”
And in an effort to pin the pair’s choice to step down as senior royals on Meghan, Piers adds: “No luv, you gave up precisely three years for this family, then stole away Britain’s favourite Prince to Hollywood where you’re now complaining even more than you were before.
“As for ‘hostage’ Harry, he’s becoming a tragic figure. It’s getting to the stage where his former army mates may want to fly over to Los Angeles to carry out an extraction operation and save him from himself.”
Piers’ fiery words come after months after he admitted he has gone too far with his relentless criticism of the royal couple.
In recent years, Piers has hit out at the couple for their plans to move away from the UK to pursue a new life in California, criticised the Duchess of Sussex for her relationship with her family, and berated Prince Harry for his treatment of his own.
But the news host appeared to be signalling a change in opinion during an interview with The Times in May.
During the Interview, Piers said: “Have I taken things a bit too far? Probably.”
And, surprisingly, he continued: “Do I think that will govern and temper how I talk about them going forward? Absolutely.”
He also said: “It’s probably not wise, if you’re a columnist, to make things too personal.”
A spokesman for Harry and Meghan said the couple did not contribute to Finding Freedom, but he did not deny the content of The Times’s extracts.