As a
state visit looms … can King Charles tame Trump?
Stephen
Bates
Mock-up
image of Charles as a circus master and Trump as a lion on a podium
Royal
visitors have long been popular in the US, and Charles has decades of diplomacy
under his belt. But can soft power save the special relationship?
Sat 4 Apr
2026 06.00 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/news/ng-interactive/2026/apr/04/can-the-king-tame-trump-state-visit
What’s
the worst that could happen when King Charles visits Donald Trump in Washington
at the end of this month? And what will be the best outcome from Keir Starmer’s
point of view, since it is the prime minister who directed the visit to go
ahead in the hope of improving our battered, supposedly special relationship?
While the relationship is still apparently meaningful to Britain, to the US it
appears to not mean so much – especially now.
The king
goes where he is told, whether he would prefer to stay at home or not. This
time to a land whose president denounces our aircraft carriers as toys and
accuses us of cowardice, and whose defence secretary talks derisively of our
Royal Navy. Perhaps Charles ought to wear his naval admiral’s uniform when he
goes to the White House, medals and all.
But what
Charles really takes to Washington is the monarchy’s greatest diplomatic asset:
soft power. It’s an ability to charm, to convince foreign governments that he’s
a good bloke and that Britain is worth taking seriously – in trade, culture or
just tourism – and that we’re a reliable ally with whom to do business, or hold
hands with across the sea. Unfortunately, the Trump administration despises
most of that, except possibly our golf courses, some of which the president
owns, so Charles faces the most ticklish and potentially most consequential
excursion of his reign.
Such
official overseas visits are carefully choreographed in advance, but it does
take two to tango and Trump is notoriously difficult to keep on message,
increasingly so these days. He doesn’t do protocol, so while we are unlikely to
see Trump, surrounded by his grinning acolytes, tearing a strip or two off the
king in the Oval Office like he did to Volodymyr Zelenskyy in February last
year, Charles may well find himself listening to a rant about the shortcomings
of the prime minister, or indeed about his plans for Canada, where it so
happens Charles is also head of state. Trump has already breached protocol
twice this week, albeit in minor matters, by describing Charles as prince and
by giving away the dates of the visit – 27 to 30 April – which the palace tries
to keep secret in advance for security reasons, not usually releasing until a
week or so before the visit.
What does
Charles do in those circumstances? Keep a dignified silence, or murmur gently
that recollections may vary?
The two
men are hardly intellectual or spiritual soulmates. Trump has no time for
environmentalism, holistic medicine or architecture, unless it’s one of his own
buildings. And the circumstances surrounding the meeting, with a war in
progress, are hardly propitious – some advisers thought that would have been a
good excuse to call the state visit off at least for now, though that would
only have increased the president’s ire to no helpful purpose. Presumably the
wrath of Trump was not thought worth provoking further.
Charles,
of course, has been playing the diplomatic game for decades. He knows how soft
words turn away wrath and, having met Trump several times on the president’s
British visits, he also knows how to flatter him, which appears to be the way
to his simple heart. Elizabeth II was a past mistress of distraction, remaining
purse-lipped, or rooting about for something in her handbag if things were
getting really sticky.
She was
only once known, on any of her 266 foreign visits, to show visible irritation:
in Morocco in 1980, when the capricious King Hassan II kept changing the
visit’s itinerary and keeping her waiting for hours in boiling weather. She
also put up with the Romanian dictator Nicolae Ceaușescu and his wife, Elena –
who were both convicted of genocide and executed in 1989 – as guests at
Buckingham Palace, and she did not complain when Trump barged past her while
inspecting a guard of honour at Windsor Castle on his first state visit in
2019. He, naturally, believed he was her favourite president; she apparently
just thought he was very rude.
Elizabeth
II had an altogether smoother job during her six visits to the US, being
generally welcomed obsequiously by the 14 presidents she met, from Truman to
Trump (Lyndon B Johnson was the only person who served during her reign whom
she did not meet). The days when American politicians reacted suspiciously to
British monarchs petered out in the mid 19th century, with only occasional
exceptions, such as Big Bill Thompson, the notoriously corrupt mayor of Chicago
in the days of prohibition and Al Capone, who announced he would punch King
George V “in the snoot” if he ever ventured into the Windy City. He presumably
knew that the king, who did not like Americans much, was unlikely ever to visit
(and never did), but Thompson believed it would play well with his Irish and
German voters – and they duly re-elected him three times.
Otherwise
royal visitors have usually been popular there, ever since a 19-year-old
Bertie, Queen Victoria’s eldest son – and future Edward VII – ventured on a
four-month tour to North America in 1860 to be greeted by cheering crowds in
New York. An audience even stood to sing God Save the Queen when he attended an
opera in Philadelphia. Sadly, the death of his father and the outbreak of the
US civil war ended such jaunts.
In 1939,
the visit of George VI and his wife, Elizabeth, the future queen mother, three
months before the start of the second world war was credited with greatly
improving Anglo-American relations. He was the first reigning monarch to visit
the US and went at the personal invitation of President Franklin Roosevelt, who
– shades of this month’s visit – did not approve of the Chamberlain
government’s appeasement policy. As Elliott, the president’s son put it:
“Father wanted the welcome … to act as a symbol of American affinity for a
country whose present political leadership he did not trust.”
For once,
it was a visit that came at the behest of the American government rather than
the British.
The trip
was a triumph. King and queen were seen as unstuffy and approachable – “We ate
things which I think are called hot dogs,” she wrote home to their 13-year-old
daughter – and helped diminish American hostility after the abdication crisis,
when Edward VIII gave up the throne to marry an American, and the earlier Irish
independence struggle. “We like them. And we hope they like us,” wrote the New
York World Telegram. It didn’t speed American military involvement in the war,
however.
So will
soft power triumph this time? What is mainly in the king’s favour is that Trump
seems to feel he has an affinity with Britain, since his mother was a Scottish
immigrant to the US. He says at the moment that he thinks the king is a great
man and a great monarch, so on such slender threads are hopes raised. Charles
will be genial and won’t provoke a change of heart. Will it change anything in
Anglo-American relations? Perhaps for a few days, at least, before Trump
returns to using Starmer as a convenient punch bag. The president is probably
as ignorant of British constitutional proprieties as he seems to be of American
ones.
No visit
is entirely incident-free, and the palace has already said that the king will
not meet a delegation of Epstein victims to discuss his brother’s behaviour nor
hear their stories first-hand. He has a reasonable excuse while police
inquiries into Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor are continuing in Britain, so there
is not very much more he can say, having already expressed sympathy. That will
not stop questions being raised, however.
The
ostensible reason for the visit is the 250th anniversary of the declaration of
independence from Britain. The late queen not only attended the bicentenary in
1976, but also reigned long enough to attend both the 350th anniversary of the
founding of the English settlement of Jamestown in 1957 (conceived as a
fence-mending visit after the previous year’s Suez debacle) but also the 400th
anniversary in 2007.
Expect to
see “No Kings” banners and demonstrators this time, but they will be aimed not
at Charles, but at Trump’s apparently monarchical ambitions. George III, the
king who lost America, remains a convenient figure of fun across the Atlantic:
half comic madman, half tyrant. Largely forgotten is George’s greeting to the
first American ambassador to the court of St James’s after the war, the future
president John Adams, in 1785: “I was the last to consent to the separation but
[it] having been made and having become inevitable, I have always said … that I
would be the first to meet the friendship of the United States as an
independent power.”
As one of
the delegates to the peace conference told his opposite number, it did not
matter because future Americans would be speaking English, not French. The ties
really do run that long and go that deep. Charles can always console himself
that his visit is to the US, not just to Trump – and the president is
term-limited, while he, at least for now, is not.
Stephen
Bates is a former Guardian royal correspondent.

Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário