Suella Braverman backs calls for Prince Harry’s US visa records to be made public ahead of first court hearing since Donald Trump’s inauguration
Suella Braverman has given her support to the Heritage Foundation over its legal bid to make Prince Harry’s visa records public.
The former UK Home Secretary weighed in behind the American think-tank as it prepares for the first court hearing for the lawsuit since Donald Trump‘s inauguration.
Heritage has raised questions about how he was able to gain entry to the US in 2020 with his wife Meghan having admitted in his 2023 book Spare to taking cocaine, marijuana and psychedelic mushrooms.
It has also alleged that Harry either lied on his papers about his drug use or has been given special treatment by the Joe Biden administration in order to emigrate to the country.
Ms Braverman backed the lawsuit in a social media video alongside Nile Gardiner, director of Heritage’s Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom.
‘I think there’s a very strong case for President Trump to intervene and to direct the release and disclosure of these documents,’ she said.
‘The American people should have the right to know what’s happened here. Prince Harry is a citizen who has come to the United States.
‘We need to know whether he broke the rules to get into the United States. If he did the American people have a right to know and those who allowed that to happen should be held to account,’ she continued.
‘Or did Prince Harry receive special treatment upon his application to get into the United States. And if that happened again that’s unacceptable and the American people have the right to know.’
Suella Braverman backed the lawsuit in a social media video alongside Nile Gardiner, director of Heritage’s Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom
Heritage has raised questions about how he was able to gain entry to the US in 2020
Ms Braverman was in office when Prince Harry was suing her department to reinstate his police security, although she only came into the post part was through the process.
As Home Secretary, she was in charge of the UK visa system and had the power to ban foreigners from obtaining visas, but generally only for serious reasons concerning national security.
Lawyers for Heritage and the Department for Homeland Security have now been ordered by Judge Carl J Nichols to meet at a federal court in Washington DC next Wednesday, February 5.
Heritage lost a previous case in September when it brought a lawsuit against the Department for Homeland Security after a Freedom of Information request for Harry’s documents to be released was rejected.
In his first ruling Judge Nichols said they should remain private.
The case was brought because visa applicants must by law declare whether they have taken drugs. Failure to do so can lead to deportation, and Heritage wanted the US Government to release the records to see what Harry said about drug usage.
Trump previously suggested Harry may be deported from the US under his leadership if the Duke is found to have falsified information on his visa form – even though his wife is American and his children are dual citizens.
The US President criticised the duke in February last year and accused him of betraying the late Queen Elizabeth II.
Trump previously suggested Harry may be deported from the US under his leadership if the Duke is found to have falsified information on his visa form
He told the Sunday Express: ‘I wouldn’t protect him… That’s unforgiveable. He would be on his own if it was down to me.’
Trump was urged this week by Heritage to release Harry’s immigration files.
Now that the Duke of Sussex no longer has support from the Biden administration, lawyers and fellows at the Heritage Foundation are hoping the newly elected president will override the court’s decision to keep the files secret.
‘I’ll be urging the president to release Prince Harry’s immigration records and the president does have that legal authority to do that,’ Nile Gardiner, director of Heritage’s Margaret Thatcher Center for Freedom told the New York Post.
‘Donald Trump is ushering in a new era of strict border control enforcement, and you know, Prince Harry should be held fully to account as he has admitted to extensive illegal drug use‘, he added.
‘My firm expectation is that action will be taken’.
Speaking to British politician and broadcaster Nigel Farage on GB News last year, Trump suggested that the royal would not get ‘special privileges if he was found to have lied about his drug use.
During the interview, Farage asked Trump if Harry should enjoy ‘special privileges’ should it come to light he did not tell the truth.
In his controversial memoir, Spare, the duke said cocaine ‘didn’t do anything for me’, adding: ‘Marijuana is different, that actually really did help me’
‘We’ll have to see if they know something about the drugs, and if he lied they’ll have to take appropriate action,’ Trump responded.
‘Appropriate action? Which might mean…not staying in America?’ Farage asked.
‘Oh I don’t know. You’ll have to tell me. You just have to tell me. You would have thought they would have known this a long time ago,’ Trump replied.
In his controversial memoir, the duke said cocaine ‘didn’t do anything for me’, adding: ‘Marijuana is different, that actually really did help me.’
He also said that while using ayahuasca, a psychedelic drug, he realised that his late mother Diana wanted him to be ‘happy’.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex quit their royal roles in 2020 and have been residing in the US with their two children ever since.
If the files are made public and Harry is found to have lied, he faces leaving his life in the Californian town of Montecito behind.