Piers Morgan has taken to Twitter once more to slam Prince Harry and Meghan Markle in the wake of media regulator Ofcom's ruling that he was "entitled to say he disbelieved" the Duchess of Sussex's claims about the Royal Family.
Yesterday, Ofcom cleared ITV, the British network that airs Good Morning Britain, after the daytime show received 58,000 complaints about former host Piers Morgan, who cast doubt over Meghan's account of royal family life - which she said left her feeling suicidal.
Ofcom concluded its report: "The interview between the Duke and Duchess of Sussex and Oprah Winfrey contained serious allegations and it was legitimate for this program to discuss and scrutinize those claims including their veracity."
Following the decision, the controversial commentator spent much of the day sharing his glee with his 7.9 million followers on the social media platform.
He then took it upon himself to defend the Queen while slamming her grandson and granddaughter-in-law for "continually trashing" the 95-year-old monarch.
He wrote: "Amid all the debate about Meghan Markle’s mental health, has anyone given a thought for what the Queen’s had to endure this year as the Sussexes have continually trashed her family & the Monarchy while she lost and mourned her beloved husband of 73 years? Just disgraceful."
Morgan also hit out at Omid Scobie, one of the authors of a new biography about Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's decision to step down from their roles as senior royals.
The 56-year-old TV personality wrote: "You just trashed the Queen in your garbage book without a care for the mental health of a 95-year-old woman grieving the loss of her husband."
This was a retort to a tweet by Scobie accusing Morgan of "reinforcing a dangerous stigma" where mental health is concerned.
Scobie wrote: "One of those restrictions is 'protection of health or morals', which makes me question @ofcom ’s decision.
"While everyone should be free to express opinion on public figures, discrediting a person’s mental health issues on TV reinforced a dangerous stigma and put others at risk."
Morgan initially responded to Ofcom's ruling referring to it as a "resounding victory for free speech."