Could there be anything more awkward and weird than King Charlesā state visit with the Trumps?
Could there be anything more awkward and weird than King Charlesā state visit with the Trumps?
Holly BaxterMon, April 27, 2026 at 6:33 PM UTC
0
What better time for King Charles to sit down over an expensive dinner with Donald Trump? There they are, just two old men nearing 80, each with vast generational wealth and a shared fondness for gold, spending the money of their respective taxpayers like itās going out of fashion.
What better time, when the ink is barely dry on the āNo Kingsā placards; when the president just a couple of weeks ago threatened to wipe out an entire civilization on social media; when the world continues to reel from the economic impact of the Iran war? It would take a real stick-in-the-mud to ruin this special vacay for the loveable snowbirds, but Iāll do it. Because the world is quite literally on fire, but on Monday, King Charles and Camilla will officially visit Melaniaās new beehive on the South Lawn at the White House.
I wish I was joking. I often am. But hereās the actual, serious schedule for Charles and Camilla: tea with Melania and Donald at the beginning of the week; a presumably milquetoast address to Congress on Tuesday, followed by a banquet; a visit to the 9/11 memorial on Wednesday; and a national park visit in Virginia on Thursday, before ā naturally ā departing for Bermuda.
Itās supposed to be all high tea and silly hats and soft power, and itās just so desperately, horrifically awkward. Because there are now so many things it would be impolite to mention over dinner: Trump personally insulting Keir Starmer after he refused to follow him into war, ranting about so-called allies, referring to British warships as ātoys,ā and then threatening to pull out of NATO, for instance.
Or the shooter at the White House Correspondentsā Dinner, who managed to bypass all Trumpās world-class security ā also relied upon for this state visit ā via the innovative and revolutionary strategy of simply running past them. Or the fact that Karoline Leavitt then immediately blamed the shooting at the gathering for journalists on journalists themselves.
Two members of the 'Stop Trump Coalition' action group pose with a mock missile and masks of Britain's King Charles III and US President Donald Trump in front of the gates of Buckingham Palace in central London (AFP/Getty)
And then thereās Charlesā brother Andrew, Schrodingerās pervert, who both did and did not go to Epsteinās island. Certainly donāt mention him. Nor should conversation alight, even for a second, on Peter Mandelson, about 10 seconds ago the UK ambassador to the US, who just lost his job because he couldnāt quite explain whether he had done bad things at the island. Come to think of it, no one should really mention anything about the island at all, or the files concerning the island, which will probably never actually be fully released.
Advertisement
Best, perhaps, to focus on the beehive.
Nothing captures the mood of the mid-2020s better than a monarch, a billionaire president, and a beehive that ācould increase honey production by about 30 pounds.ā By sheer choreography and audacity, three geriatric traditionalists will successfully pretend to the cameras that the world has not moved under their feet. The old rituals will be adhered to; the British embassy will prepare sandwiches for 650 guests.
In some way, weāll be told ā as we grit our teeth and watch an out-of-touch play written by a clueless, pro-colonialist author for the hundredth time ā this is all worth it. Itās done for our benefit. A king will visit a country founded on rejecting kings, weeks after protests explicitly rejecting kings, hosted by a president who oscillates between flirting with authoritarian aesthetics and publicly berating allies, all while everyone involved pretends this is just another week in the long, unbroken story of the āspecial relationshipā Trump flagrantly abandoned in a Truth Social post.
And it will all make sense. It wonāt be a deeply embarrassing misfire on the part of both countries. At some point, something will almost certainly happen to justify it all.
The optimists have been out in force, of course, claiming that this will be a āmomentā for international relations. Democrat Ro Khanna even suggested to the Daily Telegraph that the British king might seriously pressure Trump to release the Epstein files. Itās a nice thought, a generous gloss on something patently absurd. But itās about as likely as Charles giving up his homeopathy habit, or Trump resisting the urge to gild his next toilet. Itās their world and weāre just living in it.
In other words: How many millions does it cost to screw up a state visit? The answer is that it doesnāt matter ā and the rest of you can get back to work.
Source: āAOL Breakingā