Protests mark Trump’s visit to England
President reverses course on criticism of May, Brexit plans
LONDON — President Donald Trump closed out a turbulent 30-hour visit to England on Friday that featured massive protests, moments of pageantry and startling diplomatic backflips as the U.S. leader tried to smooth over controversies on trade, Brexit and his critical assessment of British Prime Minister Theresa May.
After a breach of protocol in bashing his hosts, Trump was on his best behavior as he wrapped up the visit, insisting the U.S.U.K. relationship is at “the highest level of special” before dropping by Windsor Castle for tea with the queen and heading off for a weekend at one of his golf courses in Scotland. He left a trail of double talk and chaos that has become a pattern in the U.S. president’s recent overseas travels.
Meanwhile, back home
Even Trump’s reception by Queen Elizabeth II at Windsor Castle became a dramatic splitscreen event, as the Justice Department in Washington simultaneously announced indictments against 12 Russian military intelligence officers for 2016 election interference.
Trump’s pomp-filled visit to the U.K. was overshadowed by an explosive interview in the Sun newspaper in which he blasted May, blamed London’s mayor for terrorist attacks against the city and argued that Europe was “losing its culture” because of immigration.
The president who prides himself on not apologizing did his own version of backpedaling at a news conference with May on Friday, seeking to blame his favorite foil for any perceived friction with May, whom he lavished with praise after having questioned her leadership.
“I didn’t criticize the prime minister,” Trump said. “I have a lot of respect for the prime minister.” He blamed the newspaper for skipping over his praise of May in a piece that was published Thursday just as the prime minister played host to Trump at an opulent welcome dinner at a country palace.
The president then urged reporters to listen to a full recording of the interview. But the audio posted on the Sun’s website only undermined Trump’s familiar charge of “fake news.”
In the interview, Trump criticized May’s plan for Brexit and said it might cause a proposed U.K.-U.S. trade deal to collapse. He questioned her competence just as her government is in turmoil from contentious negotiations on how Britain will leave the European Union.
“Well, I think the deal that she is striking is not what the people voted on,” Trump said in the interview. The president backed away from the comments on Friday, saying of May’s Brexit talks: “Whatever you’re going to do is OK with us. Just make sure we can trade together. That’s all that matters.”
May, for her part, praised the strength of the British-U.S. bond.
But in a gentle rebuke, she said: “It is all of our responsibility to ensure that trans-Atlantic unity endures.”
As for her relationship with Trump, she said: “We are friends.”
Trump was greeted by massive protests across Britain, including tens of thousands of demonstrators who filled the streets of London alongside a giant balloon that flew over Parliament on Friday depicting him as a cellphone-toting angry baby in a diaper.
From Chequers to Windsor
In a frenetic news conference at Chequers, May’s official country house, an unrestrained Trump blamed his predecessor for Russian aggression in Crimea, placed fair trade at the center of Britain’s efforts to leave the European Union, defended his beliefs that immigration has damaged Europe and repeatedly jousted with television correspondents whose coverage he found critical.
The president’s bombast at Chequers was offset by a rare moment of delicacy hours later, when a chauffeured Range Rover took Trump and first lady Melania Trump to Windsor Castle, where Queen Elizabeth II was awaiting them under a canopy on a dais.
The meeting with the queen, a traditional sign of prestige and power, was lost to some, as U.S. cable networks began cutting away to cover the Russian indictments.