Prince Harry still has a chance to reclaim his life with the royal family, according to a journalist.

Entertainment reporter, travel journalist and public speaker Stephanie Takyi and British journalist, broadcaster and author Nichi Hodgson joined GB News TV presenters Anne Diamond and Pip Tomson for a discussion about Prince Harry's recent victory in his phone hacking case against Mirror Group Newspapers. Tomson asked if the recent progress in his legal battles could change the public's opinion about him because it didn't change the fact that he had trashed his family publicly.

"I don't know necessarily. I mean, I think the kind of thought on his side is Meghan really because people really have a distaste for her and how she goes about things. I mean, I think Harry could come back into the fold. I think the British people would welcome him back, but I think he'd had to be divorced, probably," Hodgson said.

Meanwhile, Takyi pointed out that Prince Harry already crossed the line with his attacks against his family.

"I think he's done too much damage. I think he's gone too far with Harry and his kind of attack against his own family and him and Meghan. I think it's like, he's left a bitter taste in the public's mouth," Takyi said.

Prince Harry's biographer, Angela Levin, previously said he wanted to reunite with his family. The "Harry: Conversations with the Prince" author was convinced that he was fighting for his security protection in the U.K. because he still considered London his home and wanted his kids to be there. Additionally, Prince Harry allegedly wanted to make a royal comeback because "everything else he's done has failed."

"He wants to come back. He wants to be a member of the Royal Family again, but my goodness, he is a very changed Harry, and he's going to do what he wants," Levin claimed via GB News. "The fact that he has no respect for his father, no respect for his birth, I think he is going to be a big danger because he will go into competition with the Royal Family themselves," the author added.

In his 386-page ruling handed down in the High Court, Justice Timothy Fancourt stated that MGN used unlawful information gathering in 15 of the 33 newspaper articles examined at trial. The publication was ordered to pay Prince Harry $180,000 (£140,000 ), The Associated Press reported.

Last week, Prince Harry faced defeat in one of his legal battles. Mr. Justice Nicklin ordered him to pay the legal costs incurred by the Associated Newspapers, Daily Mail's publisher, after failing to have the case decided without a trial. Prince Harry's libel case against Daily Mail will go to trial next year.