While the trip is focused on the Earthshot Prize, William’s initiative to support entrepreneurs working on solutions to climate change and other environmental problems, the royal couple are also trying to show that the monarchy remains relevant in a multicultural world.
William and Kate arrived at Boston Logan International Airport, where they were greeted by Massachusetts Governor Charlie Baker and Lieutenant Governor Karyn Polito. The couple later attended a Boston Celtics basketball game.
Upon landing, William thanked local residents “for their many tributes paid to the late Queen,” noting that his grandmother recalled her 1976 bicentennial visit to Boston “with great fondness”.
But the trip has been overshadowed by Hussey’s comments and resignation - and news.com.au and The Sun are now reporting a lawyer is claiming Hussey also quizzed him about his ethnicity at the same event black campaigner Ngozi Fulani was asked about where she “really came from”.
The Sun reported Nazir Afzal, former chief crown prosecutor for the North West of England, tweeted: “I was at the Buckingham Palace reception at which Lady Hussey questioned the heritage of a brilliant DV expert Ngozi Fulani.
“She only asked me my heritage once & seemed to accept my answer - Manchester currently! Racism is never far away tho.”
The episode is a reminder of last year’s comments by Meghan, the duchess of Sussex, in an interview with American TV host Oprah Winfrey. Meghan, a biracial American married to William’s brother, alleged that a member of the royal family inquired about the colour of her baby’s skin when she was pregnant with her first child.
The latest incident took place at a reception on Tuesday hosted by Camilla, the Queen Consort, for women working to fight domestic violence.
Ngozi Fulani, chief executive of Sistah Space, an east London refuge that provides specialist support for women of African and Caribbean heritage, detailed her exchange with a member of the royal household in lengthy Twitter post.
Fulani said that when she told the woman she was from east London, she responded, “No, what part of Africa are YOU from?”
The questioner has since been identified as Hussey, who served as the late Queen Elizabeth II’s lady in waiting for more than 60 years and is one of William’s godmothers. She has apologised for “unacceptable and deeply regrettable comments”, Buckingham Palace said in a statement.
But the incident comes at a big moment for the royal couple — their first overseas trip in eight years and their first since becoming Prince and Princess of Wales following the death of the Queen.
The highlight of the three-day visit to Boston will come on Friday (Saturday NZ), when William hosts the Earthshot Prize awards ceremony headlined by entertainers including Billie Eilish.
The trip will also include visits to an anti-poverty programme, child development researchers and local flood defences, demonstrating the couple’s commitment to important issues facing the modern world.
The visit comes less than three months after the death of Elizabeth, whose personal popularity dampened criticism of the crown during her 70-year reign.
King Charles III, William’s father, has made clear that his will be a slimmed-down monarchy, with less pomp and ceremony than its predecessors. - AP, with news.com.au