The remark landed with the impact of a lightning strike. Following a startling report claiming that “60% of the UK is longing for my return,” Meghan Markle has plunged herself back into the heart of Britain’s most polarized and volatile royal debate. The alleged comment — reportedly made in a private conversation and leaked to tabloid outlets — has exploded across headlines, reigniting fury, mockery, and intense speculation about the Sussexes’ intentions, their standing in public opinion, and whether Meghan is deliberately trying to rewrite the narrative of her departure from royal life.

According to sources speaking to The Sun and Daily Mail, Meghan made the assertion during a casual discussion with a close confidant in Montecito earlier this month. The “60%” figure — never backed by any publicly available poll — is believed to stem from a private focus-group study or internal research conducted by Archewell or sympathetic media allies. Meghan is said to have framed it as evidence that the British public still harbors affection for her and Prince Harry, despite years of relentless negative coverage, the Megxit fallout, the Oprah interview, the Netflix docuseries, and Harry’s memoir Spare. “She genuinely believes the people miss her,” one source told The Mail on Sunday. “She sees the polls that show her low favorability in the UK and dismisses them as manipulated or outdated.”

The claim immediately detonated online. #Meghan60Percent surged to over 2.1 million posts within 24 hours. Supporters rallied behind her: “The British public never hated Meghan — the media and Palace did!” Critics pounced with savage mockery: “60%? She’s living in a parallel universe,” one viral tweet read, gaining 95,000 likes. Another popular meme showed Meghan’s face photoshopped onto a throne with the caption: “When you’re delusional and the numbers agree with you.” The figure has been widely debunked by fact-checkers — recent YouGov polls place Meghan’s net favorability in the UK at –42%, with only 22% viewing her positively — yet the rumor persists, fueled by the Sussexes’ loyal international fanbase.

Royal commentators have been quick to analyze the motive. “This isn’t a random boast — it’s strategic,” said Ingrid Seward, editor of Majesty magazine. “Meghan is planting seeds: if the public wants her back, the Palace must reconsider its hard line. It’s pressure disguised as popularity.” Historian Carolyn Harris agreed: “She’s trying to shift the narrative from ‘rejected royal’ to ‘beloved exile.’ The 60% claim is bold — and risky. If it’s not backed by real data, it looks desperate.”

The remark has also intensified scrutiny of the Sussexes’ post-royal strategy. With Archewell donations declining, Netflix projects underperforming, and Spotify gone, some observers believe Meghan is seeking a way to regain relevance — and leverage — by positioning herself as a victim of institutional rejection who is still wanted by the people. “It’s a classic PR move,” one media analyst said. “Create the perception of demand, force the Palace to respond, and keep the conversation alive.”

The Palace has not commented directly on the alleged statement. A spokesperson for King Charles reiterated: “The Duke and Duchess of Sussex are no longer working members of the Royal Family. That decision remains unchanged.” William and Princess Anne are said to be “unimpressed” and “unmoved” by the claim, viewing it as another attempt to manipulate public perception.

For Meghan, the fallout is double-edged. Supporters see it as proof of enduring appeal; critics see arrogance. Whether the 60% figure holds any truth or is pure wishful thinking, one thing is certain: Meghan Markle knows how to keep herself at the center of the conversation — and Britain is still talking.