Malta Independent

Trump state visit plan ‘very difficult’ for Queen

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Theresa May’s decision to invite Donald Trump to a state visit has put the Queen in a “very difficult position”, a former head of the Foreign Office says.

Lord Ricketts said the speed of the invitation had “surprised” him.

A petition calling for the state visit to be cancelled has gathered more than 1.6 million signatures. A rival pro-visit petition has more than 90,000.

On Monday, thousands of people joined UK protests against Mr Trump’s travel ban on seven mainly Muslim countries.

The controvers­ial immigratio­n measures prompted an emergency debate in Parliament.

Lord Ricketts, who was permanent secretary at the Foreign Office from 2006 to 2010, said it was unpreceden­ted for a US president to be invited for a state visit in their first year in the White House.

In a letter to the Times, he questioned whether Mr Trump was “specially deserving of this exceptiona­l honour” and described the invitation as “premature”.

“It would have been far wiser to wait to see what sort of president he would turn out to be before advising the Queen to invite him.

“Now the Queen is put in a very difficult position,” he said.

Lord Ricketts said the state visit should be delayed until later in the presidency, and Mr Trump should instead be invited for an official visit this year, “centred mainly on political talks with the prime minister”.

He said the Queen would want to receive the president in a “celebrator­y, warm, friendly visit”, but a state visit at the moment would seem “quite controvers­ial”.

It got the Queen directly involved with “this early turbulent period of the Trump presidency, when these controvers­ial policies are being announced and so on,” he said.

No date has yet been announced for the state visit. Such events often include a stay at Buckingham Palace hosted by the Queen.

But Conservati­ve MP Andrew Bridgen said that at a time when MPs were beginning debates over the government’s bill to start the Brexit process, “we certainly need that special relationsh­ip with the US even more acutely than normal”.

“The offer of a free trade deal with the US quickly will be a huge benefit to our negotiatio­ns over the next two years as we negotiate our exit from the EU and access to the single market,” he said.

Mr Bridgen added that he thought it unlikely that Mr Trump would visit the UK in the next 90 days, by which point “his issues around the travel ban will be resolved one way or another”.

Former foreign secretary William Hague said the Queen would take a state visit “in her stride”, saying she had in the past hosted “tyrants” such as Romania’s former leader, Nicolae Ceausescu, and would cope “effortless­ly” with a “brash billionair­e from New York”.

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