
Trump to make unprecedented second state visit to the U.K. in September
No American president has ever been invited for a second state visit. But Trump, a big supporter of the royal family, was hosted by Charles' late mother, Queen Elizabeth II in 2019.
On this occasion however, he will not stay at Buckingham Palace, which is currently undergoing renovations. Instead, he will travel to Windsor Castle which sits around 30 miles to the west of Britain's capital, London.
Trump who shocked reporters and palace pundits in 2018 when he breached royal protocol by walking ahead of the queen, at times blocking her view and giving her his back, said it was a 'great, great honor' when the U.K.'s Prime Minister Keir Starmer hand-delivered the invitation during a visit to the White House in February.
'That's really something,' he added.
Second-term U.S. presidents who have already made a state visit to the U.K. normally take lunch or tea with the monarch, as was the case with George W. Bush and Barack Obama. Meanwhile, state visits are ceremonial meetings between heads of state that are used to honor friendly nations and sometimes smooth relations between rivals.
Although the king formally issues the invitation for a state visit, which comes with a full display of pageantry and royal pomp, he does so on the advice of the government.
The announcement comes as Starmer courts Trump's favor on tariff negotiations, which have thrown a wrench in the Labour government's efforts to grow the U.K. economy after it contracted in April amid a record fall in exports to the United States.
Trump last month lowered tariffs on the U.K. aerospace sector to zero, but imports of British steel products continue to face a 25% duty.
On his last visit to the U.K., Trump injected himself into British politics by endorsing Boris Johnson to be the next prime minister and weighed in on negotiations over Brexit. He also continued his public feud with London Mayor Sadiq Khan, branding him a loser.
Charles could also face challenges with Trump on Canada, since he's also the head of state for the former British colony. Trump has on several occasions threatened to annex Canada and suggested it should become the 51st U.S. state.
Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney criticized the state visit invite in May.
'The true north is indeed strong and free,' Charles said, referring to Canada's national anthem.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Glasgow Times
20 minutes ago
- Glasgow Times
What does the universal credit immigration data show?
A total of 7.9 million people were receiving universal credit (UC) as of June 2025, up from 6.8 million a year earlier, according to the Department for Work & Pensions. The vast majority of current claimants are people who live or work in the UK without any immigration restrictions: British and Irish nationals, plus those who have right of abode in the country. Some 6.6 million people were in this category in June, making up 83.6% of all claimants. This is a higher proportion than a year earlier (82.5%) as well as being a jump of one million from 5.6 million. The next largest proportion are people who have a right to live in the UK under the EU Settlement Scheme. These accounted for 9.7% of all claimants in June 2025, down from 10.7% a year earlier, though the number of people in this category rose slightly from 732,107 to 770,379. Some 2.7% of claimants were classed as having indefinite leave to remain in the UK, separate from the EU Settlement Scheme, up from 2.2% a year earlier. This status gives people the right to live, work and study in the UK for as long as they like and apply for benefits if they are eligible. Some 211,090 people were in this category, up from 150,838 in June 2024. The proportion of claimants who had refugee status was 1.5%, down from 1.6%, though the number rose slightly from 111,011 to 118,749. The percentage in the UK for humanitarian reasons was unchanged year-on-year at 0.7%, with the number up slightly from 51,146 to 54,156. In addition, there was a fall in both the number and proportion of claimants classed as having limited leave to remain, or temporary immigration status, from 1.3% (86,129) to 1.0% (75,267). Overall, people from outside the Common Travel Area of UK and Ireland accounted for 15.6% of UC claimants in June 2025, down from 16.5% in June 2024. This covers the five categories of the EU Settlement Scheme, humanitarian status, refugee status, indefinite leave to remain and limited leave to remain. The number of claimants across these categories increased from 1.1 million to 1.2 million year on year, up by nearly a tenth. But the total number of UC claimants rose by a faster rate, up by nearly a sixth, from 6.8 million to 7.9 million. This is why the proportion of claimants from outside the Common Travel Area shrank year-on-year, from 16.5% to 15.6%, even though the number of these claimants rose. With 83.6% of claimants in June 2025 from inside the Common Travel Area and 15.6% from outside, the remaining 0.8% either had no immigration status recorded (0.4%) or were classed as 'other' (0.4%), such as people no longer receiving UC payments or ineligible partners of an eligible UC claimant. These percentages have changed only slightly in recent years. The proportion of claimants from the Common Travel Area of the UK and Ireland stood at 82.9% three years ago in June 2022, 82.4% in June 2023, 82.5% in June 2024 and 83.6% in June of this year. The proportion from outside the Common Travel Area was 16.2% in June 2022, 16.7% in June 2023, 16.5% in June 2024 and 15.6% in June 2025. The new data also includes a breakdown of universal credit claimants by employment and immigration status. It shows that 34% of people on UC in May 2025 (2.7 million) were in employment and 66% (5.1 million) were out of work. A year earlier the figures were 38% (2.6 million) and 62% (4.2 million). Among the 5.1 million claimants who were not in employment in May 2025, 12% (604,914) were foreign nationals while 85% (4.3 million) were British and Irish nationals or those who have right of abode in the UK. These figures stood at 12% (514,961) and 84% (3.5 million) in May 2024. Of the 604,914 foreign nationals out of work and claiming UC in May this year, 343,741 were in the UK under the EU Settlement Scheme; 109,324 had indefinite leave to remain; 60,753 had refugee status; 49,790 had humanitarian status; and 41,306 had limited leave to remain. Universal credit is available to people on a low income as well as those who are unemployed.


Times
21 minutes ago
- Times
Trump ‘not encouraging killing' by asking if Zelensky could bomb Moscow
President Trump mentioned possible Ukrainian strikes on Moscow to President Zelensky before he approved US arms supplies, but he was 'not encouraging further killing', the White House has said. His spokeswoman was responding to media reports that he had asked Zelensky why Kyiv's forces had not hit Moscow and St Petersburg, Russia's biggest and richest cities. 'Volodymyr, can you hit Moscow? Can you hit St Petersburg too?' Trump had asked, according to the Financial Times, which cited sources familiar with the call. 'Absolutely. We can if you give us the weapons,' Zelensky replied. Trump says Zelensky should not target Moscow Trump is also reported to have said that Kyiv should make Russians 'feel the pain' to force President Putin to agree to a peace deal. Trump said on Tuesday that Ukraine should not strike Moscow. 'I'm on humanity's side,' Trump said when asked if he was on anybody's side in the war. 'I want the killing to stop.'


Metro
23 minutes ago
- Metro
Trump warns Zelensky not to fire missiles on Moscow
US President Donald Trump said he told his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky not to strike Moscow, after giving Russia a 50-day deadline to stop the war. Trump was asked outside the White House on Tuesday if Zelensky should fire missiles at the Russian capital. 'No, he shouldn't target Moscow,' Trump told reporters on the South Lawn. His remark comes after a Financial Times report claimed that Trump privately asked Zelensky if he could use long-range missiles supplied by the US on Moscow and escalate attacks. Trump insisted that he is 'on nobody's side' but on 'humanity's side' and that he wants to 'stop the killing'. Get in touch with our news team by emailing us at webnews@ For more stories like this, check our news page.