Friends of Kate Middleton say it was “almost desperate” that she had to make cancer announcement

While her main motivation was the wellbeing of her young family, some friends have suggested Kate also wanted to ‘be able to carry on’ with her life as normally as possible without constant questions.

It comes as one leading expert said the princess had been ‘revictimised’ by conspiracy theorists, while a former royal advisor said the speculation about her was ‘the worst I’ve ever seen’.

Princess Catherine pictured meeting farmers at Brodieshill Farm in Moray, Scotland, in November 2023

Friends of the 42-year-old has revealed their anger at the social media frenzy that has accompanied her health problems over the last couple of months.

Sources at Kensington Palace have made it clear that by making her diagnosis public knowledge that Kate was putting her family first, and in particular, her three children Prince George, 10, Princess Charlotte, eight, and Prince Louis, five.

It is understood the announcement was made on Friday because it allowed Kate’s children to break up from school and give the Waleses the opportunity to take them to her family home in Norfolk, where they will spend the Easter holidays in private.

However, some close to the princess say the reason she revealed so much information was, in part, to silence those who had been cruelly speculating about her.

‘Catherine’s message was so honest,’ one friend told The Sunday Times.

‘Isn’t it sad that she has to be so honest and share that because of all the nonsense that has been around?

‘I feel like the whole world has been gossiping about her and there is so much bull**** out there about her and her family.

‘It was almost desperate that she had to do it.’

Another friend, who Kate confided in before announcing her diagnosis to the public, said the ‘drama’ of the last few weeks wasn’t the main driving force behind her decision, even though ‘obviously that has been upsetting’.

‘She felt she had to do it because of who she is. It was more that she knows she is a public figure and has a wider leadership responsibility,’ they told the publication.

They added: ‘She also wants to be able to carry on with as active and normal a routine as possible.’

It comes as backlash continues against the conspiracy theorists who are in a ‘permanent doom loop’ on social media circulating rumours about the future Queen.

Thousands of people have taken part in the speculation around Kate’s wellbeing, with high profile figures such as Kim Kardashian and actress Blake Lively also weighing in.

The social media frenzy took hold after a photo of Kate with her children released on Mother’s Day was shown to be photoshopped, with the Princess of Wales later saying she had edited it

One former palace adviser has said the frenzy online is the ‘worst he has ever seen’ as shameless trolls continue to spread bizarre new posts about her cancer video.

Paddy Harverson, who was previously the official spokesperson for King Charles and Prince William,

Speaking about the speculation and pressure that has mounted over the last couple of months, and in some quarters continues despite Kate’s announcement, he said: ‘It’s a sort of permanent doom loop. And it’s the worst I’ve ever seen.’

Speaking of Kate’s emotional video statement filmed in the gardens of Windsor Castle, he added: ‘I’m absolutely convinced that if we hadn’t had all the madness and social media, if we hadn’t had the sort of the Mother’s Day photo mistake, they would have still done it like this.’

Meanwhile, one expert in countering online extremism said the mother-of-three had essentially been ‘revictimised’ by the reaction to her video.

Imran Ahmed, CEO of the Centre for Countering Digital Hate, said: ‘When you’ve got a young lady, the Princess of Wales, who has suffered a medical emergency, you see people flooding in with conspiracy theories, you see them being amplified on social media platforms and pushed to millions and millions of people.

‘What really, I think, annoyed me was seeing that she was then being revictimised by being blamed for not having come out immediately.

‘Of course a family needs to have its time and its privacy. I think it’s the inhumanity of the way that social media has made us behave, forcing people to talk about things that can be very deeply personal.

‘And also seeing of course the impact of that on our society, how quickly it was picked up by millions of people, and how much it’s done damage to the Royal family themselves.’

Speaking on BBC One’s Sunday with Laura Kuennsberg, Mr Harverson said the social and mainstream media ‘feeds off itself’

The video has been reposted on social media by cruel trolls with Princess Diana and Meghan Markle’s face superimposed over the top of Kate’s in an attempt to ‘prove’ the simplicity of creating a deepfake video.

Claims a video from seven years ago appearing to show Kate wearing the same jumper was used as template to create the AI has also been ridiculed by social media users.

Linda Yaccarino, X chief executive, posted in support of Kate following her announcement on Friday evening.

She called her video ‘brave’ which was ‘delivered by Princess Kate with her signature grace’.

Yaccarino wrote: ‘Her request for privacy, to protect her children and allow her to move forward (without endless speculation) seems like a reasonable request to respect.’

Yet some were left incandescent with rage by Yaccarino’s tweet and called her a hypocrite.

Former BBC journalist Simon McCoy said: ‘Your platform has been used to promote conspiracy theories – and worse. Your hypocrisy is astounding.’

Another added: ‘It’s ridiculous that while battling cancer, Kate has to record such a video because of run-away conspiracy theories and the trolls that perpetuate them.’

witter’s former UK and Europe boss Bruce Daisley told The Sunday Times said the ‘more serious issue’ was how X’s algorithms promote untrustworthy content.

‘It is notably more potent since [Elon] Musk arrived,’ he said.

‘In truth, Musk doesn’t care. He’s demonstrated he doesn’t think about the consequences of anything he does.’

Damian Collins, the Conservative MP who formerly chaired the digital, culture, media and sport committee, said ‘the trouble with these platforms is they recommend content to capture engagement, hold people’s attention to make money out of it’.

‘And if a clickbait story, based on conspiracy theories, grabs people’s attention, then they’re more interested in that than promoting news,’ he said.

The theories – dubbed #KateGate – became frenzied after the release of a photograph on her official social media channels for Mother’s Day, when it became clear that the picture had been modified using Adobe Photoshop.

Several picture agencies issued rare ‘kill’ notices for the photo because it had been substantially altered – with online wannabe detectives pointing out the flaws in the photograph, which Kate said she edited herself.

Matters were not helped when pic agency Getty Images later said that an image of Queen Elizabeth II sitting with her grandchildren and great-grandchildren, also taken by Kate, had been ‘digitally enhanced at source’.

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