The US president is in the UK for a state visit
US president Donald Trump has stepped on to the Windsor estate after touching down in his Marine One helicopter at 12.14pm, ready to begin his second state visit to the UK in full. The King, the Queen and the Prince and Princess of Wales have welcomed the US president and his wife Melania to the UK as the US president’s historic second state visit got under way.
The King and the US president could be seen engaged in conversation as the carriage procession set off. The Queen and the First Lady were in the following carriage, and could also be seen deep in discussion.
The Prince and Princess of Wales followed in the coach behind, and as the carriages proceeded along the route, the American and British national anthems were played. The Trumps joined the King and Queen and William and Kate for a carriage procession through the Windsor estate towards the castle.
Eighty soldiers from the House Cavalry Mounted Regiment formed the Sovereign’s Escort travelling with the carriages, with the Life Guards dressed in their red tunics and white plumed helmets and Blues and Royals in their blue tunics and red plumes.
The processional route, which was not open to the public, was lined by 22 half-companies of personnel from throughout the Royal Navy, the Royal Marines, the British Army and the Royal Air Force.
Making their way to the castle, the Trumps are expected to pass not far from Frogmore House, where the Duke and Duchess of Sussex had their evening wedding reception, and also close to Frogmore Cottage, briefly home to Harry and Meghan before they quit the working monarchy and moved to America.
King greets Trump
The King welcomed Donald Trump to Windsor. As the pair met, a 41-round gun salute was fired from six First World War era guns simultaneously by The King’s Troop Royal Horse Artillery on the East Lawn of Windsor Castle, while the Honourable Artillery Company stages a salute more than 20 miles away at the Tower of London.
The scale and spectacle of the military ceremonial on show for Mr Trump is unprecedented and marks the largest military ceremonial welcome for a state visit to the UK in living memory.
The American leader and First Lady were treated to a personal, family-centred greeting outside Victoria House, a little-known property nestled in the Royal Kitchen Gardens at Frogmore on the private Windsor estate. William and Kate were deployed at the start of the royal charm offensive to greet the Trumps who arrived in Marine One, the call sign of the United States Marine Corps aircraft carrying the president.
Queen makes recovery
The Queen is attending US president Donald Trump’s state visit in full as planned after recovering from acute sinusitis. The state-of-the-art presidential helicopter, fitted with missile defence and radar jamming systems, landed on the lawn of the vast Walled Garden in the Berkshire grounds shortly after midday on Wednesday.
The King arrived with the Queen in the state Bentley at 12.02pm before heading inside Victoria House. The timings were slightly behind schedule with Mr Trump arriving at 12.14pm, behind the planned time of 11.55am.
The prince and princess escorted the president and his wife the short walking distance to meet the King and Queen in front of the gable-ended Victoria House. The unique setting, never used before at an incoming state visit in modern times, is just one of a number of flourishes being added to impress the controversial billionaire-turned politician, who sees the King as his “friend”.
Camilla rallied to attend the first engagement of the key diplomatic royal duty after pulling out of the Duchess of Kent’s funeral on Tuesday due to acute sinusitis. The Queen wore a vibrant sapphire blue dress, a matching coat by Fiona Clare and hat by Philip Treacy and a sapphire and diamond brooch
Pomp and pageantry was out in full force with the scale and spectacle of the military ceremonial on show for Mr Trump unprecedented. Lining the carriage procession route through the private Windsor estate to the castle were 22 half-companies of personnel from throughout the Royal Navy, the Royal Marines, the British Army and the Royal Air Force.
The Trumps were joining the King and Queen and the prince and princess for the scenic carriage ride through the green parkland to the castle, accompanied by a colourful Sovereign’s Escort of the Life Guards and the Blues and Royals of the Household Cavalry Mounted Regiment.
Some 120 horses and 1,300 members of the British military are involved in the ceremonial welcome at Windsor, with 160 personnel from the Royal Marines and Royal Navy, 1,000 from the British Army and 140 from the Royal Air Force. The formal ceremonial welcome in the castle quadrangle features the largest ever Guard of Honour for this occasion.
As the King shook hands with Mr Trump at Victoria House, royal gun salutes were simultaneously fired from six First World War era guns on the East Lawn of Windsor Castle and also more than 20 miles away at the Tower of London. There are no public-facing elements during Mr Trump’s engagements, with security paramount for the 47th US president – who has faced two assassination attempts in just over a year – in the wake of the killing of his ally Charlie Kirk.
Thousands are expected to take part in major protests against his two-day stay, with a march through central London, followed by a rally in Parliament Square at 5pm. Mr Trump has previously hinted at possible tariff relief for UK steel ahead of talks with Sir Keir Starmer at the Prime Minister’s country residence, Chequers, on Thursday.
Other elements of the royal-focused first day include a visit to the tomb of Queen Elizabeth II in St George’s Chapel, lunch with the royal family, a special Beating Retreat ceremony with a flypast of UK and US F-35 fighter jets and the Red Arrows, and in the evening – to top off the royal celebrations – a lavish state banquet.
The Trumps will stay overnight in the 1,000-year-old castle as guests of the King and Queen.