Prince Harry and Meghan Markle
Prince Harry and Meghan visited a Cape Town rights group fighting gender violence. POOL / Courtney AFRICA

After everything Meghan Markle and Prince Harry have gone through, you'd think the royal family would be there to support them. Surprisingly, though, they are doing just the opposite.

On Oct. 7, Daily Express reporter Richard Palmer weighed in on the recent actions of the Duke and Duchess of Sussex on Twitter.

"Nobody in the Royal Family or the Royal Household is supporting Harry and Meghan at the moment," he wrote. "Even the couple’s aides seem embarrassed by their actions. William, who dropped his brother like a ton of hot bricks earlier this year, and Charles have distanced themselves."

Almost a month later, the royal reporter doubled down on his claims adding that the parents of almost 6-month-old Archie Harrison have now apparently "disappointed" Queen Elizabeth herself.

"This rather bald statement of the facts remains true 25 days later, as far as I can tell," Palmer shared. "Their attitude has disappointed the Queen and other members of the Royal Family, according to several sources."

Meghan and Harry's attitudes aren't the only things the 93-year-old monarch could be disappointed by. She likely isn't proud of how the couple handled their issues with the British tabloids and would have handled the situation differently.

It's been quite the year for the British royal family. So much so, that a royal correspondent believes 2019 will go down in the history books as an "annus horribilis," Latin for "horrible year," for the Queen of England.

"I think it’s kind of shaping up... to be a second annus horribilis," Camilla Tominey revealed during an appearance on "This Morning."