Trump’s shorter state visit revealed with special flypast and military spectacle
- US President Donald Trump, accompanied by his wife Melania, is scheduled to make a historic second state visit to the United Kingdom from the evening of September 16 to September 18, 2025.
- The visit follows an invitation from King Charles III, handed by Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer in February during White House talks focused on a UK-US trade deal.
- On September 17, Trump will be greeted by Prince William and Princess Catherine at Windsor Castle, join a royal carriage procession, attend a ceremonial guard of honour, and participate in a state banquet where both he and the King will give speeches.
- Later on the same day, Trump and Melania will make a private wreath-laying visit to Queen Elizabeth II's tomb at St George's Chapel, followed by flypasts by UK and US F-35 jets and the Red Arrows.
- The visit will include a bilateral meeting with Prime Minister Starmer at Chequers on September 18, amid plans for large 'Trump Not Welcome' protests in London and calls from some leaders like Sir Ed Davey to boycott official events.
60 Articles
60 Articles
Royal treatment, neurodiverse history & is everyone on Ozempic?
First: a look ahead to President Trump’s state visit next weekTransatlantic tensions are growing as the row over Peter Mandelson’s role provides an ominous overture to Donald Trump’s state visit next week. Political editor Tim Shipman has the inside scoop on how No. 10 is preparing. Keir Starmer’s aides are braced for turbulence. ‘The one thing about Trump which is entirely predictable is his unpredictability,’ one ventures. And government figur…
Prime Minister Keir Starmer flatters the US President with an invitation from King Charles to visit the state. However, Trump is not a welcome guest for many British people. As a result, he should receive as little from the public as possible.
Support for monarchy crashes to record low a week before Donald Trump’s State Visit
Public backing for Britain's Royal Family has plummeted to its lowest point since records began, with just 51 per cent of Britons now viewing the monarchy as important, fresh data from the British Social Attitudes survey reveals
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