The Denver Post

TRUMP WILL BE MET WITH BRITISH IRE

- By Gregory Katz

Sure, President Donald Trump will get the red carpet treatment on his visit to Great Britain. But he also will be greeted by protesters.

LONDON» President Donald Trump will get the red carpet treatment on his brief visit to Britain beginning Thursday: Military bands at a gala dinner, lunch with the prime minister at her country residence then tea with the queen at Windsor Castle before flying off to one of his golf clubs in Scotland.

But trip planners may go out of their way to shield Trump from viewing another aspect of the greeting: an oversized balloon depicting the president as an angry baby in a diaper that will be flown from Parliament Square during what are expected to be massive gatherings of protesters opposed to Trump’s presence.

Rarely has a foreign leader been so mocked on an official visit — London’s mayor, a Muslim who has challenged Trump’s world view — OK’d the balloon, which is meant to reflect Trump’s tempestuou­s relationsh­ip with Britain, traditiona­lly the United States’ closest ally.

It is not simply the protesters, who are expected to dog Trump throughout his visit, including his weekend in Scotland, but his fraught relationsh­ip with political leaders accustomed to harmonious exchanges with U.S. leaders, a tradition of unity that goes back at least to the vital World War II partnershi­p of Franklin D. Roosevelt and Winston Churchill.

Trump may have ruffled feathers again when he said just before departing for Europe that the U.K. was in “turmoil,” suggesting it was “up to the people” to decide if Prime Minister Theresa May remains in power after a few days that saw her authority challenged by the resignatio­n of two prominent Cabinet ministers protesting her Brexit policy.

He has clashed in the past with May — even though she is a fellow conservati­ve who shares his view that defense spending should be hiked — and with her predecesso­r, David Cameron, who challenged Trump’s anti-Muslim campaign stance as “divisive, stupid and wrong.”

Labour Party legislator Paul Flynn, who has criticized Trump in Parliament, says Trump has outraged Britons — and people around the world — with his harsh treatment of immigrants.

“Give us your weary and your oppressed and we’ll divide you from your children,” he said of Trump’s policies. “It seems so un-American. We greatly respect America as a generous place built up by immigrants over the years. People see him as a cheap huckster who happens to have an office we respect as president of the United States.”

Trump angered May and many Britons by tweeting inflammato­ry and unverified videos made by Britain First, an anti-Muslim group whose leaders have been convicted of hate crimes, and by characteri­zing parts of London and other cities as nogo areas because of a purported Muslim-related crime wave.

His “America First” policies, including the decision to pull the United States out of the Paris climate accord and the nuclear deal with Iran, have brought him into conflict with Britain’s leaders over issues of real substance. Both of those accords were the result of years of painstakin­g diplomacy by European leaders — and Trump unilateral­ly trashed them.

Top it off with the introducti­on of trade policies that have targeted some European industries — even though European nations are longtime friends accustomed to easy trade with the United States — and it is not surprising that Trump’s itinerary will keep him out of central London on Friday, when large protests are planned.

Trump has been quick to criticize British society, telling an NRA convention in May that the British didn’t have guns but had so much knife crime that one hospital was like a military war zone with its floors awash with blood — a statement quickly rebutted by British physicians and politician­s.

The antipathy between Trump and segments of the British public started during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, when Trump called for a temporary ban on Muslims entering the United States. That led about half a million people to sign a petition calling for Trump to be banned from entering the U.K.

British law requires any petition supported by more than 100,000 people to be considered for parliament­ary debate, even though there was no serious attempt to prohibit Trump from coming to Britain. Still, lawmakers had no qualms about publicly calling Trump a demagogue and a fool. It was an extraordin­ary rebuke from a close ally.

Prime Minister May has abundant reasons to seek a close relationsh­ip with Trump — not least, the United States will be an even more vital trade partner once Britain leaves the European Union next year — but it is an uneasy embrace, given her opposition to many of his key policies.

 ?? Isabel Infantes, AFP ?? Activists inflate their Trump baby balloon Tuesday in London. Organizers are hoping to stage one of England’s biggest demonstrat­ions in decades to coincide with President Donald Trump’s visit.
Isabel Infantes, AFP Activists inflate their Trump baby balloon Tuesday in London. Organizers are hoping to stage one of England’s biggest demonstrat­ions in decades to coincide with President Donald Trump’s visit.

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