What the
Royal State Dinner Guest List Says About Trump’s America
There
were at least 10 American billionaires, six Fox News hosts, assorted
presidential pals, no Democratic politicians and not so many British.
Elisabeth
Bumiller
By
Elisabeth Bumiller
Reporting
from Washington
https://www.nytimes.com/2026/04/29/us/politics/trump-white-house-state-dinner.html
April 29,
2026
Guest
lists for White House state dinners have always been political rather than
social documents. Avidly chewed over in Washington, they broadcast an
administration’s priorities, favored businesses, top donors and media allies.
They are supposed to reflect the country being honored.
By those
standards, the Trump guest list for the state dinner for King Charles III of
Britain and Queen Camilla on Tuesday night was another whack at norms in an
administration that likes to shatter them.
Among the
more than 100 guests were at least 10 American billionaires, six Fox News
hosts, one Fox News executive, six conservative Supreme Court justices,
numerous Silicon Valley tech titans and assorted friends of the president’s.
There were no British cultural figures and, for that matter, a meager number of
British overall. The British Embassy in Washington appears to have had limited
input into the guest list.
There
were also no Democratic politicians, which has been the case at other Trump
state dinners.
Previous
White House social secretaries took note.
“There’s no
attempt to reach out to the other side,” said Gahl Hodges Burt, who was the
White House social secretary for three years in the Reagan administration.
“There are no clergy, there are no minority group representatives, there are no
medical researchers, there are no vaccine developers. And I would have had the
astronauts who just came back.”
Nevertheless,
she said, “it’s an impressive group. And a group you would expect."
It is
unclear who put together the guest list, which is typically overseen by the
White House social secretary, along with heavy input from the West Wing, the
White House political operation and the White House liaison to Congress.
Melania Trump, the first lady, has had no social secretary in her husband’s
second term.
On
Wednesday her press secretary, Nick Clemens, declined to comment on the guest
list or how it was put together.
Jeremy
Bernard, who was a White House social secretary in the Obama administration,
said his goal was to have the guest lists reflect America. “It doesn’t seem
like there was any attempt to make this look like something of the U.S.
overall,” he said of the Trump list. “It’s more reflective of the U.S. right
wing.”
In Mr.
Trump’s first term, he said, he would speak to the social secretary at the
time, Anna Cristina Niceta Lloyd. “She would call me and say, ‘Hey, we’re
having a dinner in the Rose Garden. Tell me about the dinner you had in the
Rose Garden.’ And I’d tell her about the lighting company. We shared stuff.
There is no such person now.”
Most of
the British guests on the list were members of the official party traveling
from London, among them Clive Alderton, the principal private secretary to the
king and queen, and Tobyn Andreae, the communications director of the royal
household. The other British guests included Harry Lopes, Camilla’s son-in-law,
and Otis Irwin, her grandnephew.
Also
included were Keith Poole, the British tabloid veteran who is now editor in
chief of The New York Post; Ruth Porat, the British American president and
chief investment officer of Alphabet and Google; and Rory McIlroy, the Northern
Irish golfer who just won his second Masters.
Tina
Brown, the British American journalist and the former editor of The New Yorker
and Vanity Fair, who regularly shreds the Trump administration in her “Fresh
Hell” Substack column (and who, needless to say, was not included on the guest
list), called the document “absolutely classic." In other words, she said,
“it’s the cronies, the money, the conservative Supreme Court justices.” She
mused that the English actress Helen Mirren and the English historian Simon
Schama would have been good to include.
Michael
LaRosa, who was the press secretary to Jill Biden, the former first lady, was
of the view that Democratic White Houses were no different from the current one
in their partisanship. “Obama invited liberal journalists and opinion writers,
and we invited the whole MSNBC crowd and Nancy Pelosi and her daughter,” said
Mr. LaRosa, who now works for Ballard Partners, a lobbying firm run by a top
Trump fund-raiser.
The guest
list for the dinner for the king and queen, he said, “didn’t strike me as
unusual. It struck me as par for the course. I always think of these things in
terms of internal politics. What donor do we need to prime for the next cycle?
Who is not getting tender love and care?”
Notable
names on the Trump guest list included David Ellison, the chief executive of
Paramount; Jeff Bezos, the founder of Amazon; Steve Schwarzman, the chief
executive of the Blackstone Group; and Meg O’Neill, the chief executive of BP.
At a 2007
state dinner for Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip during the George W. Bush
administration, guests included Representative Nancy Pelosi of California, then
the speaker of the House; Robin Roberts of ABC; and the British historian
Martin Gilbert.
Katie
Robertson contributed reporting from New York.



Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário