“This is not Winston Churchill that we’re dealing with,” Trump grumbled in March, adding the so-called special relationship was “not like it used to be”. The American leader has also mocked Charles is commander-in-chief.
In turn, Starmer has stepped up his public criticism of the war, while stressing the breadth and depth of UK-US ties in defending the state visit. An early April poll found that 48% of Britons are in favour of cancelling it.
“Often what the monarchy is able to do, through the bonds that they build, is reach through the decades in a situation like this,” Starmer told MPs when asked why the trip was going ahead.
Trump – a vocal admirer of the royals and whose mother was Scottish – told the BBC this week that the visit could “absolutely” help repair relations, praising the king as “fantastic”.
‘Politics’
Charles, 77, showcased his diplomatic skills during Trump’s state visit to Britain last September, with Royal Holloway University of London monarchy expert Craig Prescott noting he is “generally very good” at navigating such occasions.
Prescott said the independence anniversary provided a useful “get out” for the British side to argue the trip is “not about Keir Starmer and Donald Trump, per se”.
But he acknowledged it was “that little bit closer to politics” than usual and Charles would likely address the “very big elephant in the room” in a coded way in his speech to the US Congress.
The first British monarch to address Congress since his mother, the late Queen Elizabeth II, in 1991, he will mark the two countries’ shared history and deep ties, the palace has said.
“He might refer to how the special relationship has perhaps waxed and waned over time,” Prescott predicted, arguing Charles has proven to be a “better speaker” than his mother.
But Graham Smith, of the anti-monarchy campaign group Republic, argued the King will “go through the rituals without offering anything of substance”.
The only critical thing “about this pointless trip is how Trump behaves”, he said on X.
Meanwhile, the scandal around late US sex offender Jeffrey Epstein threatens to encroach on the highly choreographed tour.
Charles has faced a major crisis over the friendship his brother Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor, previously known as Prince Andrew, had with the late billionaire, who died in prison in 2019.
The longstanding controversy intensified after Andrew was arrested in mid-February following new revelations over their links.
‘Out of touch’
The King, who stripped his disgraced brother of his titles in October, said “the law must take its course” in a rare personally signed statement.
Andrew, who remains under police investigation, has not been charged and has denied any wrongdoing.
Several US lawmakers have unsuccessfully urged the ex-prince to testify before Congress about Epstein.
Democrat Ro Khanna wrote to Charles in March requesting the King meet victims privately, while the family of late Epstein accuser Virginia Giuffre made a similar demand.
Palace sources have told UK media a meeting “will not be possible”, arguing it could “impact on [police] inquiries, or the proper course of the law”.
Khanna told The Times this month that declining would make Charles look “out of touch” and “diminishes the credibility of the monarchy for future generations”.
But he added acknowledging the survivors and their struggle for justice in his Congress address “would go a long way”.
The visit, which will see the royals have tea with Trump and First Lady Melania and attend a state dinner, appears meticulously planned to avoid unscripted moments.
Only photographers will capture the Oval Office meeting between Trump and Charles, limiting chances for the King to be blindsided by the unpredictable US leader and reporters.
Charles and Camilla will also visit New York, touring the 9/11 memorial, before departing later in the week for Bermuda for the King’s first visit to a British overseas territory as monarch.
-Agence France-Presse