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Beneath King Charles’ jokes and decorum, a subtle rebuttal to Trump

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US President Donald Trump and Britain's King Charles III during a State Dinner in the East Room of the White House in Washington, DC, on April 28.

Britain's King Charles III (left) and US President Donald Trump during a state dinner in the East Room of the White House in Washington on April 28.

PHOTO: AFP

Michael D. Shear and Zolan Kanno-Youngs

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King Charles III quoted author Oscar Wilde, joking that the British have everything in common with America “except, of course, language”.

US President Donald Trump said the morning’s gloomy rain reminded him of a “beautiful British day” and noted that his mother thought young Prince Charles was “so cute”. Both men waxed poetic about the bonds between their countries.

Yet, on the first full day of a state visit focused on the shared history between the US and Britain, the King sprinkled in some ever-so-subtle rebuttals to Mr Trump. He spoke on April 28 of the value of the transatlantic alliance, the importance of checks and balances and his passion for the environment. He even spoke of his time in the Royal Navy, after Mr Trump belittled British naval capabilities in recent weeks.

The King tucked his rejoinders into a mostly light-hearted speech to Congress, which drew applause and laughter from the audience of Democrats and Republicans. It was only the second time a British monarch had addressed Congress.

“Please rest assured I am not here as part of some cunning rearguard action!” the King said.

The disciplined and careful public appearances by King Charles and Mr Trump came at a dire moment in American-British relations, arguably at their lowest point in decades over the war in Iran and Mr Trump’s scathing attacks on NATO.

But for a day (and maybe just a day), the special relationship that has developed over the past 250 years seemed – on the surface, at least – special.

In a rarity in the Trump era, the President did not veer wildly off script during the day’s mostly ceremonial events. He did not invite a horde of reporters into the Oval Office just before their meeting to field questions on Iran, the ballroom or Greenland in the presence of his visiting foreign dignitary. He did not lash out at another global ally.

There is little evidence in more recent history that an era of good feeling will last much beyond the departure of the royal couple’s jet from America’s shores on April 30, particularly as Mr Trump’s well-known affection for the royals does not extend to the British government.

Mr Trump is furious at Britain for its refusal to join the fight against Iran, and his administration continues to accuse the British government of denying free speech to conservative voices.

In London, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer vows not to be dragged into another war of America’s choosing and bristles at Mr Trump’s description of their aircraft carriers as nothing more than “toys”.

The differences were never likely to be erased by the King’s first visit to the US as the British monarch. By law and tradition, the King is supposed to rise above the daily back-and-forth of politics and disputes that often bedevil leaders of both governments.

Mr Trump was a guest of the royal family for a state dinner at Windsor Castle in September 2025, an experience he described as “one of the highest honours of my life”. Months later, he belittled Mr Starmer as a coward for not entering the US-Israeli war with Iran.

“That was not very long ago, and look where we are in terms of the bilateral relationship,” said Mr Philippe Dickinson, deputy director at the Atlantic Council’s Transatlantic Security Initiative. “It can be cited as evidence by those who are going to make the case that it’s nice words one day and then forgotten the next day.”

The King, at one point, did appear to address, obliquely, the Jeffrey Epstein scandal that has caused political headaches for the Trump administration and caused a rupture in the royal family.

“In both of our countries, it is the very fact of our vibrant, diverse and free societies that gives us our collective strength, including to support victims of some of the ills that, so tragically, exist in both our societies today,” King Charles said.

Mr Trump welcomed the King to the White House with a ceremony known as reviewing the troops, the highest diplomatic honour the US can extend to a visiting head of state, as well as a 21-gun salute by an honour guard.

In a speech that largely stuck to his prepared remarks, Mr Trump praised the Anglo-American relationship in lofty terms, describing it as having birthed a “revolution in human freedom” that was “never, ever extinguished, but carried forward across centuries, across oceans and across history, until it became a fire that lit the entire world”.

While King Charles did not directly reference tensions between Britain and the US – and no part of the King’s or President’s day of conversations was made public – he at times appeared to be in conversation with Mr Trump and other doubters of the Western alliance during his speech to Congress.

“The very principle on which your Congress was founded – no taxation without representation – was at once a fundamental disagreement between us, and at the same time a shared democratic value which you inherited from us,” the King said during his speech to Congress on the afternoon of April 28. “Ours is a partnership born out of dispute.”

He drew a standing ovation when he spoke about how the concept of checks and balances in American government has its roots in English history.

King Charles said the US Supreme Court Historical Society found that Magna Carta was cited in at least 160 Supreme Court cases since 1789, “not least as the foundation of the principle that executive power is subject to checks and balances”. Mr Trump has worked to significantly expand executive power.

He spoke of “the natural wonders” of the US and “our shared responsibility to safeguard nature, our most precious and irreplaceable asset”.

King Charles is an avid environmentalist; Mr Trump, by contrast, pulled out of the Paris Agreement on climate change, making the US the only country in the world to abandon the international commitment to slow global warming.

King Charles also seemed to take note that Mr Trump has repeatedly belittled Mr Starmer as a coward and mocked British military might.

The King spoke of his own service in the Royal Navy more than half a century ago and repeated Mr Starmer’s assertion that Britain had “committed to the biggest sustained increase in defence spending since the Cold War”.

He also pushed back, ever so gently, against Mr Trump’s attacks on Britain and on the NATO alliance for not joining in the Iran war. After the Sept 11, 2001, attacks, the King told lawmakers: “We answered the call together – as our people have done so for more than a century.”

While it was unclear whether the King’s appeal would be enough to mend the wounds in the transatlantic relationship, Mr Dickinson said the British were likely hoping the visit would create a pathway to recovery.

“That’s why the government values the royal family as a diplomatic ace in the hand,” he said. “It’s not a magic wand, but it helps.” NYTIMES

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