Some blamed Meghan Markle for splitting the royal family.

This year, the Duke and Duchess of Sussex decided to have a separate household from the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge. They left Kensington Palace and now live in Frogmore Cottage in Windsor. They are also now under Buckingham Palace.

A week ago, the palace also announced that Prince Harry and Markle will have a separate charity. They left their shared charity Royal Foundation to Prince William and Kate Middleton.

Many believed that Markle is to blame for the split. One netizen commented in an Express article by writing that the former “Suits” star “split her own family” and now “she’s starting on OUR Royal Family.”

The netizen pointed out how Prince William, Middleton and Prince Harry got along so well before Markle joined them. At present, it’s Prince William and Middleton, and Prince Harry and Markle.

In an interview with “Good Morning Britain,” Tom Bower also said that Markle could be blamed for the split.

“I do, I think Harry is a really decent bloke but easily influenced,” Bower said.

“I don't think she wants to be constrained by the royal demands and the royal way of doing things.”

A number of netizens also shared their opinion about the issue on Twitter. They have a mixed reaction about the issue. Some blamed Markle while many also believed that the split had nothing to do with the new mom.

“Of course Meghan came along trouble came along..like it was there from 2009...And split now...Tells a lot about the new addition and the negativity surrounding the Royal family,” a netizen wrote on Twitter.

Another online user said that the split was due to their work ethics. One said that the Duke and Duchess of Sussex are hard working while the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge are lazy.

Meanwhile, another netizen said that the split was due to their “divergent roles.” Max Foster wrote that the Cambridges are on a more formal and restrictive path.

Prince William, Prince Harry, Meghan Markle and Kate Middleton
Pictured [L-R]: The Duke of Cambridge, Duke of Sussex, Duchess of Sussex and Duchess of Cambridge arrive at Westminster Abbey to attend a service to mark the centenary of the Armistice on Nov. 11, 2018 in central London. Paul Grover/AFP/Getty Images