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Trump meeting Queen rankles with many Britons

Queen Elizabeth II welcomes US President Donald Trump to Windsor Castle on Friday for a meeting which many Britons find the toughest part of his trip to swallow.

Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II travels in a horse-drawn carriage to Horseguards parade ahead of her Birthday Parade, ‘Trooping the Colour’, in London on June 9, 2018. The ceremony of Trooping the Colour is believed to have first been performed during the reign of King Charles II. In 1748, it was decided that the parade would be used to mark the official birthday of the Sovereign. More than 600 guardsmen and cavalry make up the parade, a celebration of the Sovereign’s official birthday, although the Queen’s actual birthday is on 21 April. / AFP PHOTO / Daniel LEAL-OLIVAS

Queen Elizabeth II welcomes US President Donald Trump to Windsor Castle on Friday for a meeting which many Britons find the toughest part of his trip to swallow.

Trump was gracious about the British sovereign in a newspaper interview out Friday.

However, his previous comments about the royals have been less tactful, including boasting he would have slept with Diana, princess of Wales “without even hesitation”, and saying “who wouldn’t” photograph the Duchess of Cambridge topless.

Some 1.86 million people signed a petition at the June 2017 general election, wanting to prevent Trump from making a state visit “because it would cause embarrassment to Her Majesty the Queen”.

His four-day trip to Britain is not a state visit — with the formal trappings of a carriage procession and certain banquets — but it bears many of the hallmarks, including time with the head of state.

A YouGov poll of 1,648 British adults conducted on Monday and Tuesday found that half thought Trump’s working visit to Britain should go ahead, with just over a third thinking it should be cancelled.

However, the meeting with 92-year-old Queen Elizabeth on his first visit to Britain as US president still seems to rankle.

Just one in three (35 percent) thought the monarch should meet Trump, as opposed to half (49 percent) who thought she should not.

‘Great and beautiful grace’
Trump will be treated with a guard of honour when he arrives at Windsor Castle, west of London. The Coldstream Guards will give a royal salute and play the US national anthem.

The two heads of state will inspect the guard before watching them march past, in the castle’s quadrangle.

The Trumps will then take tea with Queen Elizabeth.

“For so many years she has represented her country, she has really never made a mistake. You don’t see, like, anything embarrassing. She is just an incredible woman,” Trump told The Sun newspaper.

“My wife is a tremendous fan of hers. She has got a great and beautiful grace about her.”

His previous comments about members of the royal family have not been so generous. Buckingham Palace said no other royals will be meeting him at Windsor.

Trump has previously spoken about Prince William’s wife Kate and his late mother Diana. William, second in line to the throne, is the monarch’s grandson.

In a 1997 interview, just weeks after Diana’s death, US radio host Howard Stern asked Trump if he “could have nailed her”.

Trump replied: “I think I could have.”

In 2000, Stern asked Trump if he would have slept with Diana. The tycoon replied: “Without even hesitation.

“She was crazy, but these are minor details.”

‘Only herself to blame’
In 2012, after Kate was photographed sunbathing topless in France, Trump weighed in on Twitter.

“Who wouldn’t take Kate’s picture and make lots of money if she does the nude sunbathing thing. Come on Kate!” he wrote.

“Kate Middleton is great — but she shouldn’t be sunbathing in the nude — only herself to blame.”

Trump will not be meeting Queen Elizabeth’s eldest son and William’s father Prince Charles, the heir to the throne.

A January 2017 report in The Sunday Times newspaper said Trump and Charles would not meet during his visit to Britain due to their strongly divergent views on climate change.

Prince Charles is a keen environmentalist.

A source close to Trump was quoted as saying: “He won’t put up with being lectured by anyone, even a member of the royal family. Frankly, they should think twice about putting him and Prince Charles in the same room.”

There have been 13 US presidents since Queen Elizabeth’s reign began in 1952, and, including Trump, she has met them all, barring one: Lyndon B. Johnson.

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