King Charles to pay state visit to US as Britain seeks to mollify Trump

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US President Donald Trump and Britain's King Charles inspect the Guard of Honour as they attend a welcome ceremony during Trump's state visit, at Windsor Castle, in Windsor, Britain, September 17, 2025.

The state visit will place King Charles in a tricky position, requiring him to praise the US president who is deeply unpopular with Britons according to polls.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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LONDON – King Charles will make a state visit to the United States in late April, Buckingham Palace said on March 31, a high-profile trip that the British government hopes will help to repair relations with US President Donald Trump, damaged by the Iran war.

King Charles and his wife Queen Camilla will visit the US in a long-planned trip to mark the 250th anniversary of the country’s independence from British rule, before the couple pay a visit to Bermuda.

“Their majesties’ programme will celebrate the historic connections and the modern bilateral relationship between the United Kingdom and the United States,” Buckingham Palace said, adding the trip was being made on the advice of the British government.

It will be the first state visit by a British monarch since 2007 when King Charles’ mother Queen Elizabeth made what was the fourth such US trip of her reign.

Mr Trump said the King and Queen’s visit would begin on April 27 with a banquet dinner at the White House the next day.

“I look forward to spending time with the King, whom I greatly respect,” he wrote on Truth Social. “It will be TERRIFIC!”

Relations strained over Iran war

Previously good relations between the US president and Prime Minister Keir Starmer have been strained over the British leader’s reluctance to get involved in the Iran war and refusal to let the US use British bases to launch initial attacks.

While US forces have since been permitted to carry out what Mr Starmer calls defensive strikes, Mr Trump has repeatedly criticised the prime minister, saying he was “not Winston Churchill” and had ruined the historically close alliance.

Mr Trump has derided Britain’s offer to send more military assets to the region, and even as the state visit was being announced, he launched yet another verbal assault on countries which had failed to help and were now struggling to get jet fuel, singling out Britain.

“You’ll have to start learning how to fight for yourself, the U.S.A. won’t be there to help you anymore, just like you weren’t there for us,” he wrote on Truth Social.

As well as Iran, Mr Trump has also changed his mind on a British deal with Mauritius to transfer sovereignty of the Chagos Islands, home to the strategically important US-British Diego Garcia air base, calling it a great mistake, to the delight of some of Mr Starmer’s domestic opponents.

Mr Starmer, a former human rights lawyer, has cast doubt on the lawfulness of the attacks on Iran, which are not popular at home and have raised concerns about rising energy costs.

But he has avoided any direct criticism of Mr Trump and publicly stated that their relationship remained good.

Royal influence

Since Mr Trump returned to office, Mr Starmer has used the soft power of the royals to mollify the US president, who has been gushing in his praise for the King and his family, to keep him onside over the war in Ukraine and to soften possible trade tariffs.

King Charles hosted Mr Trump for an unprecedented second state visit to Britain in September 2025, treating him to a carriage ride and state banquet at Windsor Castle where Mr Trump hailed the special relationship between the two nations, a bond he then described as “irreplaceable and unbreakable”.

Mr Starmer will hope that the 77-year-old king can again help smooth the current turbulent relations, before heir-to-the-throne Prince William is expected to visit the US in the summer during the soccer World Cup.

Mr Trump said on March 26 that the visit would not be affected by the fallout with Mr Starmer.

“He’s a friend of mine,” Mr Trump said of King Charles. “He’s a great gentleman.”

The state visit will place the king in a tricky position, requiring him to praise a president who is deeply unpopular with Britons according to polls.

Furthermore, Mr Trump’s views on climate change are a world away from those of the monarch, who has spent a lifetime campaigning on environmental issues.

King Charles could also face questions about his younger brother, Mr Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, who is under police investigation for misconduct in a public office over his ties to the late US sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Mr Ed Davey, leader of the Liberal Democrats, Britain’s third-biggest party in Parliament, has previously said the planned visit should be cancelled, saying Mr Trump should not be given the diplomatic coup in the light of his repeated insults of the country. REUTERS

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